1851 – First Presbyterian Church (Non-subscribing), Newry, Co. Down
A fine small Gothic church with three bay nave, north and south transepts, and a gabled porch with corbelled roof to ground.
A fine small Gothic church with three bay nave, north and south transepts, and a gabled porch with corbelled roof to ground.
“At the termination of a leading street in the thriving town of Killylea[gh], county Armagh [Down],
This imposing building was built for Robert Edward Ward and his family in 1852. It is now (since the 1950s) the headquarters of North Down Borough Council who use the mansions spectacular grand salon as the council chamber.
Constructed for the 4th Earl Annesley between 1852 and 1854 in a Scots Baronial style. Finished in granite,
Later internal works by Richard Mills Close. After a series of bank mergers and takeovers from the 1970s onwards,
Starting life as a simple single aisle church, the nave was entended by two bays,
Ballyedmond Castle was a Tudor-Baronial mansion, with pointed gables, mullioned windows; a battlemented tower and conical-roofed turret.
Erected in 1857, the Tower was built by local people as a monument to Charles William Stewart,
Opened by the Belfast and County Down Railway on 10 September 1858, and closed to passengers 16 January 1950.
The entrance porch has been rebuilt, removing the small circular window over the entrance.