1840s – Innismore Hall, Derrybrusk, Co. Fermanagh
A smaller country house from the mid 1840s. A distinctive design with a curved bow end elevation and a bowed portico to the front.
A smaller country house from the mid 1840s. A distinctive design with a curved bow end elevation and a bowed portico to the front.
In Burkes Guide to Country Houses, Kilcooley Abbey is described as a large winged house, build circa 1790 by Sir William Barker,
Seat of the Earls of Charlemont, and originally built in the 18th Century but heavily remodelled by the second Earl in 1842,
Also known as Lisheen, and now almost completely ruined. Reputed to be haunted, the house was abandoned in the 1920s after repeated attempts to rid the house of its presence failed.
The third Mallow Castle, and built on the site of their former stable block by by Sir Charles Denham Orlando Jephson-Norreys,
Muckross House is best known for its parkland setting beside the Lower Lake at Killarney, but the house is also worthy of its location.
Built between 1841 and 1843, the Daniel Robertson-designed Whitfield Court was built for William Christmas on the footprint of a previous property.
A seaside villa redesigned and enlarged into a small mock Tudor castle incorporating a fake “medieval”
Tudor Gothic remodelling of house, and landscape scheme, in progress during the period 1835-45 for the Doyne family.
Also known as Dawson Grove, Dartrey was built in 1846 and designed by William Burn as a large Elizabethan Revivial mansion to replace an earlier house on the site.
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