1822 – Court House, Caledon, Co. Tyrone
Described in Ordnance Survey of 1833 as “The courthouse is a neat and substantial building, it was erected for the purpose for which it is used,
Described in Ordnance Survey of 1833 as “The courthouse is a neat and substantial building, it was erected for the purpose for which it is used,
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.
Described by Alaistar Rowan as “a large multi-gabled and aggressively picturesqe villa with decorative bargeboards,
The gate lodge of Northland House is all that survives today of the ancestral home of the Earls of Ranfurly in Dungannon.
An obelisk of hammered granite with dressed angles standing on a base reached by three steps.
This memorial commemorates the residents of Dungannon who were killed or missing in World War I (202 servicemen) and World War II (44 servicemen).
English sculptor Sydney March created the sculpted figures of Death, War, and Victory on the memorial in Omagh to the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers who died during the Boer War.
Fine Baronial stables with stepped dormers and small corner turrets on a central archway for James Hamilton,
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.
A vast and magnificent mill complex constructed by the Herdman family, who also built the model village and their home here.