1864 – Tinode House, Blessington, Co. Wicklow
Tinode House was burned to the ground in 1922 by the IRA, and has since been partially rebuilt.
Tinode House was burned to the ground in 1922 by the IRA, and has since been partially rebuilt.
Formerly a private house called Court-na-Farraige, part of a group of fanciful, French chateau-inspired houses along the coastline.
This was the second of three major International Exhibitions held in Dublin, constructed on what later became Iveagh Gardens –
Redburn House was designed by the architects Lanyon, Lynn and Lanyon and built for Robert Grimshaw Dunville and his wife Jeannie in 1865.
In 1809 work was started to rebuild a large Plantation castle to the designs of John Nash –
Opened in 1843 as Samuel Steel’s Commercial and Family Hotel. Destroyed by fire in 1864, it was rebuilt by architect E.H.
Destroyed during the 1941 Belfast Blitz along with its later extension of 1899 on the corner with High Street.
Now demolished, the Braidwater Mill was established in 1865 and employed generations from the town and surrounding areas.
The chapel was designed in a Romanesque style to blend in with the existing convent buildings –
The original core of the house was built in 1798 by Thomas Benjamin Adair, but heavily remodelled in 1866, when it was extended and crenellated.