1856 – Christ Church of Ireland, Innishannon, Co. Cork
Christ Church was designed by Joseph Welland, architect to the Board of First Fruits and subsequently to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners,
Heaton, Butler and Bayne were a British firm who produced stained-glass windows from 1862 to 1953. Clement Heaton (1824–82) founded his own stained glass firm in 1852, joined by James Butler in 1855, they were joined by Robert Turnill Bayne (1837–1915), who became their sole designer and a full partner in the firm in 1862. The firm was known as Heaton, Butler and Bayne from 1862.
Christ Church was designed by Joseph Welland, architect to the Board of First Fruits and subsequently to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners,
On a wonderful leafy corner site in the heart of suburban Ballsbridge, Bartholomew’s was designed in a Gothic Revival for Sidney Herbert,
“Kenwood Tower now being erected for Mr Brooke will have the external walls with Loughborough red bricks and rubbed red brick quoins,
This area of Belfast underwent rapid expansion during the middle to late 19th century –
Built in the Gothic Revival style at a cost of £160,000, and was inaugurated 27 September 1871.
The present parish church, All Saints, was built in 1872 and succeeded a previous building on the same site dating from 1830.
Designed for Alexander Mackintosh esq., the perspective including ground plans & 1st floor plans were published in The Building News,
The Rossmore Mausoleum was designed by E.J. Tarver for the 4th Baron Rossmore who died after a hunting accident at Windsor Castle in 1874 aged 23.
In 1863, William Nicholson of the firm of J&W Nicholson & Co, gin distillers, bought the nearby estate of Basing Park.
Published in The Building News, October 18th 1878. “This chapel is attached to the residence of the late William Gibbs,
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