1840 – Caledon Monument, Caledon, Co. Tyrone
Built in the 1840s in memory of the 2nd Earl Caledon, in form of Greek Doric column the column was topped by a statue by Cork-born sculptor Thomas Kirk.
Built in the 1840s in memory of the 2nd Earl Caledon, in form of Greek Doric column the column was topped by a statue by Cork-born sculptor Thomas Kirk.
In the 1960s it was decided that the courthouse was too cramped to accommodate both the local judicial system and the county council in the context of the county council’s increasing administrative responsibilities.
A Class A listed large Tudor Revival architecture house constructed in the 1840s. It has a terraced front with octagonal pinnacles and gables at each projection of the façade,
A large Elizabethan style manor-house constructed between 1870 and 1874 near Fivemiletown in County Tyrone.
Early Ruskinian Gothic Venetian palazzo style, probably designed by W.H. Lynn. Now part of Ranfurly House,
The Convent of Mercy opened June 9th 1868 with a later extension by Harte &
“This building — of which we give an illustration — was consecrated on the 3rd ult by the Most Rev.
Competition entry for a new area hospital for Omagh. Submitted under the pseudonym “Modern Requirements”.
Still in use today but as part of a larger campus. Unusual design with a classically inspired pediment on the main door surround,
Italianate country house designed for Thomas Adair. According to Alistair Rowan in The Buildings of Ireland: North West Ulster,