1811 – Caledon House, Co. Tyrone
The estate was bought from the seventh Earl of Cork for £94,400 by James Alexander (later first Earl of Caledon) in 1776.
The estate was bought from the seventh Earl of Cork for £94,400 by James Alexander (later first Earl of Caledon) in 1776.
Cassels designed this Dublin town house for Marcus Beresford, Earl of Tyrone, in Marlborough Street between 1740 and 1745.
Built to complement the large house built for the Herdman family, it is quite similar in design to one at Stokesay Castle.
Constructed by the Herdman family, who constructed the model village and mills of Sion. Sion House was originally a three-bay square house built in 1845 by the leading Irish architect,
Published in The Building News, June 30th 1905. Described as “New arts & crafts style house about to be erected.”
Designed for local landowner T.S. Porter esq., published in The Building News, August 28th 1885. Clogher Park was formerly Clogher Palace,
Polychromic brick and stone building for technical school. Now part of North West Regional College.
Design by James H. Owen of the Board of Works for RIC police barracks –
Constructed in 1905-08 to replace an earlier thatched-roof church building. The centenary of the present meetinghouse was celebrated by the congregation in April 2006,
A small severe-looking church, the interior of which has sadly been ruined by modernisation. Exterior finished in rubble stone with sandstone trimmings.