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Buildings(v1.0)

Historic Building Details


HB Ref No:
HB18/13/023


Extent of Listing:
Barn, decorative gateway & enclosing walls.


Date of Construction:
1740 - 1759


Address :
Clanbrassil Barn and Gateway Tollymore Park Newcastle Co Down


Townland:
Tollymore Park






Survey 2:
B+

Date of Listing:
11/07/1977 00:00:00

Date of De-listing:

Current Use:
Estate Related Structures

Former Use
Estate Related Structures

Conservation Area:
No

Industrial Archaeology:
No

Vernacular:
No

Thatched:
No

Monument:
No

Derelict:
No




OS Map No:
255/9

IG Ref:
J3446 3276





Owner Category


Central Govt

Exterior Description And Setting


Rubble-built, two storey gabled, gothick barn of c. 1757, with distinctive bell tower topped with a narrow spire of 1789. The left side of the E façade merges with a gothick gate. The gate merges with a wall which encloses a tarmac covered yard area to the S. To the N is a further walled enclosure. The barn is set to the NE within Tollymore Park, just to the N of where Tollymore House once stood. To the centre of the S façade is a tall pointed arch opening with steel grill and gate. To the right of the gate are three evenly spaced window openings with multi-pane Georgian-like panes but with top hopper openings. Either side of window 3 is a pointed arch headed door opening. The opening is framed with stone dressings. Immediately above the door opening is a stone lintel which forms the stone base to the fanlight which has Georgian panes. To the left of the arch opening are three windows and two doors as before. To the first floor are seven squat, arch headed openings. These are arranged symmetrically with three grouped in the centre and two grouped to the left and two to the right. These openings all have timber louvered ventilators. They have the overall shape and size of the fanlights to the door openings. The E gable and has one high level, quatrefoil opening set within a diamond shaped stone surround. Rising from the apex of the gable is a square tower. The lower section which has three stone bands (or string courses) and between bands 2 and 3 are four decorative, bap stones to each face. To the S face is a sun dial. This square section surmounted by a taller octagonal section. To each face of the octagon is a small pointed arch opening, with a louvered frame, with a clock to the S face. The octagonal section has a tall stone spike pinnacle to each corner. A narrow stone octagonal spire surmounts the tower. A small weather vane (with compass points) rests on the ball finial at the top of the spire. At the base of the gable (to the eaves) are further slender stone spike pinnacles. The W gable has a quatrefoil and stone spikes pinnacles, all as before. To the apex of the gable is a small square minaret with pointed arch opening. A small spirelet with crockets and ball finial surmounts the minaret. To the left side of the N façade is an arrow loop opening to the ground floor with a similar one directly above, to first floor. To the right of this is a multi pane fixed window to ground floor. To the right of this is a stone wall which encloses the courtyard area. The left side of the wall forms a balustrade to an external stair and is shaped to follow the line of the stair. The remainder of the façade is contained within the walled courtyard. To either side of this section is an external stone stair (the stone wall to that to the W face follows the line of the stair , as before). Each stair has a solid stone side which is shaped to follow the pitch line of the stair. Each stair rises to a gabled half dormer door. To the left of centre is a large pointed arch opening. This is the N side of the large opening to the south (it goes right through the building). Either side of the opening are two small pointed arch headed openings. To the far left is a multi pane opening set at a higher level. To the far right are two, four pane, window openings with what appear to be smooth cement bands. These windows may at one time have been door openings. To the left of the large opening at first floor is a dressed door opening. To the right of the large opening are three small pointed arch openings. The E gable merges with a decorative (and equally ecclesiastical) gate opening. The matching gate pillars each have a recessed pointed arch panel to E and W of the main body and are surmounted by a squat octagonal section which has a recessed pointed arch panel to each face. The octagonal section is in turn surmounted by a stone cap with a stone acorn motif. The arch proper is flat pointed triangular and has a curved pointed gothic arch underside. The apex has circular panel with decoration. The outer sides have small bap stone crockets. The apex is surmounted by a further acorn motif. Both sides of the arch are identical. The gate to the wall on the W side of the barn is plain and has two square gate pillars with shallow pyramidal stone caps.

Architects


Wright, Thomas

Historical Information


This barn was built in c.1757, by James Hamilton, the newly created Earl of Clanbrassil. It was built just to the north of his recently constructed Tollymore House and was probably influenced by the designs of the some time architect, Thomas Wright of Durham, who visited Hamilton at Tollymore in 1746. The spire was added to the tower in 1789, at which time the present bell [?and clock] was also probably installed (the bell is dated 1785). The building continued to serve as a store after all of Tollymore Park was sold to the state (1941) and the demolition of Tollymore House in 1952, but was converted in the early 1970s to provide an exhibition hall, lecture theatre and toilets. TOLLYMORE PARK In late Medieval times Tollymore and the townlands surrounding it were under the lordship of the Magennis family of Upper Iveagh. In 1611, Brian MacHugh Magennis, received royal confirmation of his ownership of the area when he was given a grant of seven and a half townlands (including the land which now contains the park), from King James I. Tollymore remained in the Magennis male line until c.1685, when Bernard Magennis died childless and the estate passed to Bernard’s sister, Ellen. Ellen was married to William Hamilton and on her death her inheritance passed to their son James. His son, also called James (who inherited the estate in 1701), was created Viscount Limerick in 1719 and Earl of Clanbrassil (of the second creation) in 1728. James, who is popularly remembered under his initial title of Lord Limerick, initiated the development of Tollymore as a naturalistic landscape demesne in c.1720 by enclosing much of the land to form a deer park, commencing large scale tree planting and building a hunting lodge and the ‘Old Bridge’. He also rebuilt the parish church at Bryansford, the small estate village to the north of the park (named after his ancestor, Brian Magennis). In c.1750 he began the construction of a larger house, probably taking advice on its design from his friend, English architect Thomas Wright, who visited Ireland in 1746-47, staying at ‘Tullymoor Park’ in September of the former year. Dr. Pococke, in his ‘Tour of Ireland’ of 1752, comments that his lordship had completed two rooms of his new ‘pretty lodge’ by that date and had also built ‘a thatch’d open place to dine in’ on the south side of the Shimna River. Just to the north of the house the ‘Clanbrassil’ Barn was added in 1757, with the Horn Bridge built (to the south) around the same time. Lord Limerick died in 1758 and was succeeded by his son (also named James), who extended the new house and continued the tree planting begun by his father. In the 1780s he erected the Barbican gate at the eastern entrance of the park, the gothick gate at the Bryansford entrance, the hermitage, the gothick follies and steward’s lodge on the Hilltown Road, and a number of bridges within the park including Ivy Bridge, Parnell’s Bridge and Foley’s Bridge, the last named after his wife, Grace Foley. These additions (which also appear to have been Thomas Wright influenced), as well as the planting, made Tullymore one of the most attractive estates in Ireland. Bernard Scalé’s 1777 map of Tollymore gives some indication of the picturesque appearance of the park during this period with a rolling landscape, much planting, meadows, rivers, streams, and walks through the woods. An advertisement offering lodgings in Bryansford village from The Belfast News-Letter of 26 April 1785, made much of the lodgings ‘most pleasing prospect of the Right Hon. Earl of Clanbrassil’s much admired demesne, which is beautiful to the sight and extensive to the bounds’ and whose wholesome air and ‘herbage on which the goats feed makes it much frequented by ladies and gentlemen for the recovery of lost health’. James, 2nd Viscount Limerick and 2nd Earl of Clanbrassil died without issue in 1798 and the park passed to his sister Anne, the wife of Robert Jocelyn, 1st Earl of Roden. Their son, Robert 2nd Earl of Roden, who inherited the estate in 1802, built the Bryansford and Barbican gate lodges (the latter now demolished). He also erected the obelisk monument to the east of the house, in memory of his second son, James, who met an untimely death in 1812. The Earl and his successor, Robert- the 3rd Earl, further developed Bryansford itself, making it ‘a pleasing place of residence for those persons that like a quiet retreat’. A Roman Catholic Church was built at the eastern edge of the village in 1820, school houses in 1823 and 1826, with some labourers’ dwellings and the large dower house (‘The Nest’) around the same time. The 3rd Earl also constructed a water powered saw mill within the demesne, and, in 1865, added another small lodge to the east. He enlarged Tollymore House itself, by adding an additional storey to the wings and a tall (and somewhat incongruous) French chateau style roof to the original central block. Tollymore Park remained solely in Roden hands until 1930 when the 8th Earl sold two thirds of the land to the Ministry of Agriculture for afforestation purposes. In 1940 the remaining third was bought by the Ministry and during World War II Tollymore House and part of the grounds were used by the Army. After the War the house fell into a state of disrepair and was demolished by Lord Roden in 1952. In 1955 Tollymore, the first state forest to be designated a Forest Park, was opened to the public. It has continued to be developed for timber production, recreation, conservation and education purposes since then, and though the ‘big house’ itself may have disappeared, most of the park’s 18th and early 19th century, gates, bridges and lodges have survived. References- Primary sources 1 PRONI MIC.147 Roden Papers 2 PRONI D.465 Roden Papers 3 PRONI D.2647 Roden Papers 4 PRONI T.2647 Roden Papers 5 PRONI T.3438 Roden Papers 6 Walter Harris, ‘The ancient and present state of the county of Down’ (Dublin 1744) 7 Dr. Pococke, ‘Tour in Ireland’ (Dublin 1752) 8 Map of Tollymore Park by Bernard Scalé (1777) [?Original in possession of Lord Roden] 9 ‘Taylor’s and Skinner’s Maps of the roads of Ireland’ (Dublin 1777), map 8 10 Thomas Milton, ‘Seats and demesnes of the nobility in Ireland’ (Dublin 1782-93) 11 Linen Hall Library ‘Belfast News-Letter’ 26th April 1785 12 R. Lewis, ‘The post chaise companion or traveller’s directory through Ireland’ (Dublin 1786) 13 Rev John Dubordieu, ‘Statistical survey of the county of Down’ (Dublin 1802) 14 A. Atkinson, ‘Ireland exhibited to England…’ (London 1823) 15 PRONI OS/1/3/43, 49 OS maps 1st ed. 1834, Co Down sheets 43 and 49 16 ‘Ordnance Survey Memoirs of Ireland vol.3: Parishes of County Down I’, ed. Angelique Day and Patrick McWilliams (QUB 1990) 17 PRONI VAL/1A/3/43, 49 Valuation maps, Kilcoo (c.1836) 18 PRONI VAL/1B/362 First valuation records, Kilcoo (1836) 19 Samuel Lewis, ‘Topographical Dictionary of Ireland’ (Dublin 1837) 20 ‘Parliamentary gazetteer of Ireland’ (Dublin 1843-44) 21 ‘Belfast and Province of Ulster Directory’ Vols.1-21, 1852-1900, (Belfast, Henderson [1852-65], Belfast News-Letter [1865- ]) 22 Maps of Lord Roden’s Co. Down estate (c.1855) [Originals in possession of Lord Roden] 23 PRONI OS/6/3/43/3, 49/3 OS maps 1st rev.1859, Co Down sheets 43 and 49 24 W McComb, ‘Guide to Belfast and adjoining districts…’ (Belfast 1861), pp.160-162. 25 PRONI Second (Griffith’s) valuation records, Kilcoo (1863) [in print] 26 Alexander Knox, ‘History of Co. Down’ (Dublin 1875). 27 George Henry Bassett ‘County Down Guide and Directory’ (Dublin 1886), pp.137-139. 28 UFTM W.A. Green collection WAG 1, 564, 565 Photographs of Tollymore Park etc. c.1900 29 Robert M. Young, ‘Belfast and the Province of Ulster in the 20th century’ (Brighton 1909), p.201 Secondary sources 1 ‘Archaeological survey of Co. Down’ (Belfast HMSO 1966), pp.86, 177-178. 2 EHS Records of the first survey of buildings of historical and architectural interest in Tollymore ward (1972-) 3 P.J. Rankin, 'Historic buildings, groups of buildings, areas of architectural importance in the Mourne area of South Down', (Belfast UAHS 1975), pp.11-19 4 ‘Tollymore Forest Park’ (HMSO c.1980) 5 Mark Bence-Jones, ‘A guide to Irish country houses’ (rev. ed. London 1988), p.274. 6 F. Hamond and T. Porter, ‘A tour of the Mournes’ (Belfast ?1991) 7 Mícheál B, Ó Mainnín, ‘Place-names of Northern Ireland vol.III- The Mournes’ (QUB 1993), pp.97-101, 114. 8 J.A.K. Dean, ‘The gate lodges of Ulster- a gazetteer’ (Belfast UAHS 1994), p.97-98

Criteria for Listing


Architectural Interest

A. Style B. Proportion C. Ornamentation H-. Alterations detracting from building J. Setting K. Group value

Historic Interest

X. Local Interest Z. Rarity



Evaluation


Church-like, rubble-built, two storey, gabled gothick barn of c. 1757, with distinctive bell tower topped with a narrow spire of 1789. To the south, the east façade merges with a gothick gateway. Both the barn and gateway may have been based on designs by Thomas Wright of Durham. The gate merges with a wall which encloses a tarmac covered yard area to the S. To the N is a further walled enclosure.

General Comments




Date of Survey


17 January 2000