1765 – Pomeroy House, Pomeroy, Co. Tyrone
Built in 1765 by the Rev James Lowry, Rector of Clougherny. The entrance front had a central, three-sided bow, one bay on either side of it.
Built in 1765 by the Rev James Lowry, Rector of Clougherny. The entrance front had a central, three-sided bow, one bay on either side of it.
Stuart Hall was built in the 1760s for Baron Stuart, later Viscount Castle Stuart. It was originally a three-storey Georgian house,
The town hall located at the junction of Market Street and Main Street – a building which was being rebuilt in 1766.
Designed by John Nash who had a cluster of work in the area including Caledon House in Co.
Rebuilt in 1829 by Major Richardson Brady in a heavily symmetrical and very flat “Regency Baronial”
Cecil Manor was described as ‘rather forbidding and architecturally uninteresting’ with wide set windows in large solid expanses of wall underneath an overhanging roof with a bracket cornice.
Northland House was a three-storey, irregular classical mansion, dating in its final form from around 1840.
Aughentaine Castle consisted of a two-storey main block and a lower two-storey wing, with two tall Italianate campaniles of equal height,
The house was heavily remodelled and extended for George Perry McClintock in 1862 to a design by Derry and Belfast-based architects Boyd &
Constructed by the Irish North Western Railway in 1862-63, and later extended by the Great Northern Railway which took over the INWR in 1883.