Carrowduff
Houses within 10km of this house
Displaying 18 houses.
Houses within 10km of Carrowduff
Displaying 18 houses.
House name | Description | |
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Milford | A Morony residence located on the Fitzgerald of Carrigoran estate. Occupied by James Fitzgerald in 1814 and by Edward Morony at the time of Griffith's Valuation. It is labelled Millford House on the 1st and subsequent edition Ordnance Survey maps. A house is still extant at the site. | |
Westcliff Lodge | Built post 1838, this house was occupied by Henry Vereker at the time of Griffith's Valuation, valued at £11.10 shillings. Henry Vereker of Dublin married Anne Morony of Limerick in 1823. | |
Seaview | Home of Francis Goold Morony from at least 1837 until the 1870s. He held it from Burdett Morony. The house was valued at £21 and was surrounded by 5 acres. Later inhabited by the Ellis family and sold to the Sisters of Mercy in 1929. |
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Wellington | A Morony residence which later passed to the Ellis family, to whom the Moronys were related. In the latter part of the 20th century it was the home of Dr Patrick Hillery, President of Ireland. |
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Miltown House | Built in the early 1780s by Thomas J. Morony, who developed the town of Miltown Malbay and the main Morony home throughout the 19th century. Slater refers to it as the residence of Mrs Eleanor Lucinda Moroney in 1894. It was sold about 1919 to the Sisters of Mercy and became a school. |
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Woodbine Cottage | Also known as Admirals Cottage, this house was a summer residence of the Russell family located on the Morony estate. Passed to the Browning family through marriage with the Russells. The house is no longer extant. | |
Westpark | Occupied by Thomas J. Morony in 1814. In the mid 20th century the summer home of the McClancy family. | |
Freagh Castle | Mr Thomas Gorman was resident at 'Freigh', Miltown Malbay in 1814. By the time of Griffith's Valuation Matthias Kenny was the occupier and he held the property from Colonel George Wyndham. The Kenny family continued to live at Freagh until 1970. |
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Kildeema | Arthur O'Donnel was resident here in 1814. At the time of Griffith's Valuation William Mathews occupied a house and over 400 acres at Kildeema on the Wyndham estate. There was a tile yard on the property and the buildings were valued at £35. The Mathews continued to live here into the 20th century. |
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Annagh | The townland of Annagh was in the possession of the Stacpooles from the early 18th century and the house was probably built in the second decade of that century. In the 1770s William Stacpoole moved from Annagh to Eden Vale. Thomas Heher was living in the house in 1814 and by the time of Griffith's Valuation George Brew was resident. The house was a ruin in the early 20th century. | |
Berry Lodge | A house on the Stacpoole estate, occupied by Francis Woulf in 1814 and by a member of the O'Dwyer family in the mid 19th century. This house is still a residence. |
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Cloonmore | At the time of Griffith's Valuation occupied by William McMahon, held from Timothy McMahon and valued at £10. This was a one storey thatched house, a modern house is now located near the site. |
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Quilty House or Salus House | Summer residence of the Crowe family, this house is marked on the first Ordnance Survey map of 1842. It was valued at £25 at the time of Griffith's Valuation and recorded as a mansion house in 1906. It is labelled Salus House on subsequent Ordnance Survey maps but is no longer extant. | |
Tromra | A house situated just south of the village of Quilty held from the Mahons. At the time of Griffith's Valuation this house was occupied by Admiral Sir Burton Macnamara baronet, the sixth son of Francis Macnamara of Doolin. It was valued at £18. A house of £9 valuation across the road from his residence was known as Tromra Lodge and was occupied by Lieutenant J. Morris of the Royal Navy at this time, grid reference R019 742. Neither house exists any longer. | |
Creegh House | A house on the Stewart estate, Weir writes that it was built for James Kelly on his marriage to Margaret Kenny of Freagh Castle and five generations of their descendants have lived there. | |
Merville House | Occupied by John Carroll in 1837 and held by him in fee at the time of Griffith' s Valuation. Weir writes that the house was in ruins by 1904. |
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Doolough Lodge | At the time of Griffith's Valuation Matthew Kelly [of Kilrush] held a herd's house valued at £3 and 201 acres from Edward O'Brien at Treanmanagh. The house dates from about the mid 19th century and was the Irish home of Matthew's son General Sir Thomas Kelly Kenny. Weir writes that the General had King George V to stay in the house following the King's coronation in 1910. | |
Seafield Lodge | The home of the Casey family in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Occupied by William Casey in 1814. Leased by Captain Francis Casey to William Brew in the mid 19th century and it remained a Brew home until it was burned down in 1922. |