Landed Estates
University of Galway

Lodge

Houses within 10km of this house

Displaying 6 houses.

Houses within 10km of Lodge

Displaying 6 houses.

House name Description
Glenmore At the time of the first Ordnance Survey Glenmore was occupied by the Rev St George Knox, curate of Crossmolina, as the Ormes were living in Dublin. Glenmore became the property of Godfrey Fetherstonhaugh after the 1853 sale. His mother was an Orme of Abbeytown. Well maintained and owned by a French family who advertised the sale of the house in September 2006. Photo of Glenmore
Fortland The Jacksons held this property from the Pratts of Enniscoe. It was described in the 1830s as a plain house ornamented with a few trees and scrubs. At the time of Griffith's Valuation it was leased by George H. Jackson from Mervyn Pratt when it was valued at £12. It is still extant ad now owned by Billy Cook. Photo of Fortland
Owenmore or Millbrook Ordnance Survey Field Name Books record a 'neat cottage' in the townland of Correens, built in 1796 and called Millbrook. Irish Tourist Association File records Owenmore as the residence of the Misses Knox in 1942, erected about 1830 by the Orme family. The house belonged to the McCausland family in the latter part of the 20th century. Now owned by Gerry O'Mara. Photo of Owenmore or Millbrook
Belville An Orme home in the first half of the 19th century. Described in 1942 by the Irish Tourist Association surveyor as a large house near the church at Ballyglass, formerly owned by the Orme family and "purchased some years ago by Mr MacDonald, Kilfian. It has remained unoccupied...", due to a popular belief among the local people that the house was haunted. It is no longer extant.
Sheskin Lodge A hunting lodge built by the McDonnell family and later owned by the Jameson family, now in ruins.
Altnabrocky A shooting lodge built in 1848. It was valued at £2 at the time of Griffith's Valuation. Professor Seamus Delargy, Chairman of the Irish Folklore Society, stored all the Society's manuscripts there for safekeeping during World War II.