Saturday, 28 September 2013
Saturday, 7 September 2013
Kilruddery House
Co. Wicklow
Saturday, 13 July 2013
Sunday, 7 July 2013
Menlough Castle
Menlough Castle
Co. Galway
For me, Menlough Castle in Co. Galway is the real-life embodiment of
the fictional country house, Manderley, destroyed by fire in the novel Rebecca
by Daphne Du Maurier. Like Manderley, Menlough is an ancient structure added to
by generations of one family, in this instance, the Blake’s of Galway. The ancient
castle on the left bank of the River Corrib was built in 1569 and was the
ancestral home of the Blake family until July 1910, when it was destroyed by
fire. The old castle formed part of a building comprising of many different
periods, situated about a mile from the city of Galway. A pier wall extended
for about one hundred yards along the river in front of the castle, upon which
once sat a small cannon and a telescope. Located here for the detection of
approaching intruders in times past. In 1910, Menlough Castle was the home
of Sir Valentine Blake, the 14th Baronet, his wife and their invalid daughter
Miss Eleanor Blake. In July of that year, Sir Valentine and Lady Blake travelled
to Dublin for a number of days as Sir Valentine was undergoing an operation. At
this time, Menlough was said to be one of the oldest continuously inhabited
castles in Ireland. It’s paneled reception rooms contained numerous paintings,
tapestries and various heirlooms of the ancient family. All the rooms of the
castle were sumptuously furnished, wainscoted with black oak and the impressive
central staircase was made from the same material. On the fateful night in
1910, a fire broke out on the suite of rooms on the upper floors occupied by
Miss Blake. She could not escape because of a disability. The
only other persons on the premises were the coachman James Kirwan and two servants
Miss Browne and Miss Earley.
The castle, the morning after the fire |
James Kirwan was awakened at 5.40 am on
the morning of the fire by the screams of the two female servants. He was
sleeping in a bedroom located over the hall door and when trying to make his escape
he was met with flames and blinding smoke. Realising his escape by the
staircase was impossible he exited by the window and lowered himself to the
ground fifty feet below using the thick ivy that grew on the façade of the
building. On reaching the ground with some difficulty, he could now see that
the whole castle was ablaze. Large plumes of smoke were pouring from all the
windows on the river front of the castle. When Kirwan raced to the rear of the
castle, he saw the unfortunate sight of the two servant girls trapped on the
roof screaming for someone to save them. When the fire broke out, the maids
escaped on to the roof of the castle through a skylight when they found their
escape route cut off by fire and smoke. Kirwan rushed to the gate lodge to get
help and eventually procured a ladder which was found to be twelve to fifteen
feet short of reaching the women nearly four floors up. Bundles of hay were
placed on the ground and the girls were urged to jump. Miss Earley jumped but
was killed, Miss Browne fared better however she was still in a terrible state
and conveyed to the County Hospital. Despite the best efforts of various fire
appliances there was no hope of saving Miss Blake or the castle which was a
complete inferno. Eventually the roof and floors collapsed, crashing down into
the basement of the castle below. As Miss Blake’s remains were never recovered
a Memorial Service was held in St. Nicholas’s Church in the city which was
attended by a large congregation. The Blake Family was represented by Mr Thomas
Blake, the brother of Miss Blake; her parents were unable to attend. As the
memorial service took place, the remains of the castle were still smouldering
and debris lay seven to eight feet high. Despite the intense heat the search
continued for Miss Blake’s body, this search was in vain and today a memorial
still exists in the grounds of the ruined castle remembering her loss.
The entrance front of Menlough Castle shown as it was before 1910 ( above) |
The surviving maid who jumped from the roof of the castle on the
night of the fire was Miss Mary Anne Browne. She sued her employers under the
Employers Liability Act as she had suffered severe injuries after her forty-foot
jump. She still suffered from partial paralysis and doctors could not confirm
if this would be permanent. Sir Valentine Blake had great sympathy for her
situation, but as the fire was an accident, he declared that he was not
responsible. The judge presiding over the trial agreed and her case was
dismissed together with a subsequent appeal. A relative of the unfortunate maid
who was killed when she jumped from the roof of the castle tried to sue Sir
Valentine for her loss. The case was also dismissed as the relative could not
be classed as a dependent of the deceased. Two years after the fire, Sir
Valentine Blake died at Longford Terrace, Monkstown, Co. Dublin. He was 76 and
had succeeded to his title in 1875. He had been the Justice of the Peace for
County Galway and in 1872 acted as High Sheriff for the county. He was
succeeded by his son Mr Thomas Patrick Ulick John Harvey Blake. When Sir
Valentine was buried there was a large police presence which ensured the event
passed peacefully. This was necessary as when Sir Valentine’s father died in
1875, the man who was a Catholic was buried as a Protestant. This did not sit
well with the mainly Catholic tenantry around Menlough. A riot broke out at the
funeral and several people received prison sentences. In recent years a local
businessman proposed to restore the castle and grounds retaining the upper
floors of the building for his own personal use. He had proposed to invest over
€ 12 million in the project which was supported by many, however the economic
downturn ensured that the project was mothballed.
Saturday, 29 June 2013
Moydrum Castle
Co. West Meath
&
The Unforgettable Fire
&
The Unforgettable Fire
The 1984, U2
album cover of the “Unforgettable Fire” which featured the iconic image of the
castle.
Accreditation- Copyright Universal Island Records Limited
|
This photograph from the 1900s
shows the garden front elevation of the castle that faced the lake in the vast
landscaped grounds. The windows on this elevation had regular sash windows
topped with hood mouldings.
Accreditation- The National Library of
|
The story of this building begins with William Handcock who was an M.P. for Athlone, who was created Baron Castlemaine in 1812 for his support for the Act of Union. In that same year in recognition of his new position in society he employed the leading architect, Richard Morrison, to design a castle in the Gothic Revival style. The building was essentially a two-storey, over basement castellated country house which was completed in 1814. It incorporated an earlier house that existed on the site from 1750 which had been described as an ordinary farmhouse with inconvenient interior arrangements. The completed castle had a battlemented entrance tower with two slender polygonal turrets on either side of the large entrance door. The entrance front was asymmetrical with a polygonal tower at one end and a square tower at the opposite corner. The windows of the front elevation had Gothic tracery while those on the side of the castle that over looked the garden had regular square headed sash windows. Over the front door there was balcony which could be accessed by a French door in an elaborate church-like window. While the exterior of the castle was Gothic in style, the interior was classical and was described as being similar to Borris House in County Carlow . There were a substantial quantity of farm buildings and gardens to the rear of the castle which were necessary to service a building of this size. The castle had an extensive complex of twenty seven outbuildings and many local people from the surrounding townlands were employed in various parts of the estate. Morrison was also engaged to design a hunting lodge on Hare Island which was a retreat for Baron Castlemaine and allowed him the opportunity to engage in fishing, shooting and boating on Lough Ree. A set of imposing gates and an adjoining lodge provided access to the demesne and the road that winds through the estate is still used today. After travelling through the entrance gates, the road divided in two, one road led to the front of the house while the other diverged and led to the servant’s entrance at the rear. Those lucky enough to be guests of the Castlemaine’s travelled through the landscaped parkland and over a little bridge that spanned a lake to the right of the castles entrance front.
The entrance front of
Accreditation- The National Library of
|
The first Baron Castlemaine met an untimely end in
1839 when he fell out of his first floor bedroom window of the castle during a
storm. As he had no children, the title and estate passed to his brother
Richard. The second Baron Castlemaine did not enjoy the fruits of his new title
for long, as one year later in 1840 he died in Dublin . He was then succeeded by his son,
also named Richard, who was now styled the third Baron Castlemaine. Further
problems were experienced by the family in 1840 when Moydrum Castle caught
fire. An unattended candle in Lady Castlemaine's bedroom caused the blaze after
it fell into a turf bucket. This was one of three fires that were to occur
during the lifetime of the castle which seemed destined to burn down. In order
to reduce the pain and suffering of the tenants on the estate during the famine
in the 1840s, a number of building projects were undertaken as a form of famine
relief. These projects included the construction of a private family
church, new entrance gates, farm buildings and an eight foot wall that enclosed
the demesne. In 1859, the third Baron Castlemaine received six proposals from
the architect William George Murray for a Tudor Gothic entrance gate and lodge
but these were never executed. In 1869 the third Baron Castlemaine died and his
son became the fourth Baron Castlemaine. Both of these Barons did not treat
their tenants well and were considered tyrants and a lot of public resentment
existed locally against them. Possibly to appease local sentiment, the fourth
Baron instigated a number of works centred on Moydrum church. A plaque on the
gable of this building records that the entrance porch was erected by the
fourth Baron in 1876. From 1886 onwards the fourth Baron began to sell off the
lands of the estate under the Land Purchase Acts. In just over twenty years,
the Handcocks had reduced their land holding from 12,041 acres to just 550
acres.
Richard Handcock, 4th Baron
Castlemaine
by Frederick Sargent, sketch in pencil, 1870's
|
Both the fourth Baron Castlemaine and his wife died in 1892 and the Moydrum estate passed to their son Albert Edward Handcock now the fifth Baron Castlemaine. As Albert had received a substantial inheritance from his father together with Moydrum, he led a life of leisure as a country gentleman. He married Annie Evelyn Barrington from
Today the ruin of
Accreditation-
Photograph by David Hicks
Lord and Lady Castlemaine were very active in social circles and were often mentioned attending numerous balls and events. Many of these events included mixing in royal circles which would explain the visit of the Duke of Connaught to Moydrum in August 1905. His Royal Highness arrived in Athlone on the 7.15 train from
A ruinous fire eventually sealed the fate of Moydrum but the castle had avoided disaster by the same incident previously in 1840 & 1912. An account of the 1912 fire was featured in the national press which explained that paintings and antiques to the value of £1,000 were destroyed in the blaze that nearly claimed the life of Lady Castlemaine. Lord and Lady Castlemaine were in residence in the castle, when a fire began to fill the interior with smoke which awoke the household. Lady Castlemaine and the servants made their escape from the burning building by placing wet towels over their heads. The fire was quickly brought under control by the servants who saved the entire building from being gutted. The Castlemaine’s leased a house in Foxrock in
|
Accreditation-
Photograph by David Hicks
|