1880 – Railway Station, Coalisland, Co. Tyrone
Coalisland railway station closed in the late 1950s and is now largely gone. The bridge is still there, as is a railway shed,
Coalisland railway station closed in the late 1950s and is now largely gone. The bridge is still there, as is a railway shed,
Another one of William H. Mills’ characteristic polychromatic stations for the GNR – yellow brick relieved with black,
Built to complement the large house built for the Herdman family, it is quite similar in design to one at Stokesay Castle.
The railway line to Strabane from Omagh originally opened in 1847 and was run by the Irish North Western Railway.
Constructed by the Herdman family, who constructed the model village and mills of Sion. Sion House was originally a three-bay square house built in 1845 by the leading Irish architect,
Designed for local landowner T.S. Porter esq., published in The Building News, August 28th 1885. Clogher Park was formerly Clogher Palace,
Designed by William Henry Lynn, and built in 1887 for James Bruce of Belfast, after he acquired Benburb Manor from the 7th Viscount Powerscourt.
Aughnacloy was the head office of the Clogher Valley Railway and is the most substantial building on the line. The Clogher Valley was a 37 mile long,
Constructed as part of the narrow gauge railway, the Clogher Valley Railway, which served parts of Armagh and Fermanagh but was centered around rural Tyrone.
Fine Baronial stables with stepped dormers and small corner turrets on a central archway for James Hamilton,