1866 – Railway Station, Killeshandra, Co. Cavan
Once the last railway station on the 10km branch of the Midland Great Western Railway that linked Killeshandra with Cavan, via Crossdoney.
Once the last railway station on the 10km branch of the Midland Great Western Railway that linked Killeshandra with Cavan, via Crossdoney.
Designed by the Cavan-born church architect William Hague and was dedicated on the 12th April 1868.
Part of a series of Presbyterian manses built across county Cavan in the 1870s.
Built in the grounds of Cullies House, an eighteenth-century country house which was demolished c.1980. Designed in 1869,
Originally built by First and Second Bailieborough Presbyterian Churches as an institute for the education of boys in their faith. In 1903 it was acquired by the Masonic Order and it continues to be a meeting place for Lodge 796.
Small Gothic inspired Masonic Hall on an almost domestic scale.
Built by voluntary labour and costing £6,000, this vast four-storey edifice was completed by 1883. Demolished.
Belturbet was the former terminus station of both the 4¼ mile Ballyhaise to Belturbet branch of the Great Northern Railway and of the Cavan and Leitrim Railway.
Built to replace an older Church which had been erected about 1770. This older Church was known as 2nd Bailieborough and is now demolished with just the graveyard remaining.
An attractive and eclective small post office building from the early twenthieth century when many similar buildings were built across the country.