Cullies House
Houses within 15km of this house
Displaying 3 houses.
Houses within 15km of Cullies House
Displaying 3 houses.
House name | Description | |
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Clonervy | In 1814, Clonervy was the home of Richard Blackwood. Located on the estate of Earl Annesley it was vacant at the time of Griffith’s Valuation when its rateable valuation was recorded as £30. George Graham occupied Clonervy in the 1860s and in 1880 it was the residence of the subsheriff John Maxwell James Townley. The Irish Builder records plans for general repairs to Clonervy House for Patrick Lyons in 1912. A smaller building still occupies this site. | |
Ballyhaise | Ballyhaise built for Colonel Brockhill Newburgh, design attributed to Richard Castle but more likely Sir Edward Lovett Pearce, early 18th century. About 1800, sold to William Humphrys who added two storey wings to the building. Lewis describes the house in 1837 as ‘a spacious mansion, with an elevated front curiously ornamented with arches’. It was the seat of William Humphrys. In the 1850s, the buildings had a rateable valuation of £110. Since 1905, Ballyhaise has been an agricultural college. | |
Corr House | In 1814 Richard Harkness lived in Corr House, Killeshandra. By the time of Griffith’s Valuation it was owned and occupied by John Alexander Faris. Its rateable valuation was £9. John Alexander Faris married Charlotte, daughter of William Harkness of Corr House on 23 April 1850 (The Anglo Celt, 26 April 1850). In 1906, James A. Faris occupied this 'mansion house' valued at £9.5.0. for rates. Members of the Faris family were still living at Corr at the end of the 20th century. The National Inventory of Architectural Heritage states that the house is no longer in use. |