Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Curraghmore House



Curraghmore, meaning great bog, is the last of 4 castles built by the de la Poer family after their arrival in Ireland in 1167. The Castle walls are about 12 feet thick and within one, a tight spiral stairway connects the lower ground floor with the roof above.
Of the many curious and interesting features of Curraghmore, the most striking is the courtyard front of the house, where the original Castle is encased in a spectacular Victorian mansion with flanking Georgian ranges.
The combination of architectural features from several periods around the ancient core of the original castle produces a most striking composition; "immediately recognizable and undeniably moving", as it was described by Country Life.

In more than 800 years the property has passed through the female line once only and that was prior to Catherine de la Poer marrying Sir Marcus Beresford in 1715 when she was just a teenager. Together with her husband, it was she who carried out much of the remodelling of the house and grounds and it was Lady Catherine who created the unique Shell-house herself.
 
  

 



CREEPY!!!!


The quality of the craftsmanship employed on the developments on Curraghmore through the ages, has secured the House's reputation as one of the most important country houses in Ireland.
In the late eighteenth century, the 2nd Earl, afterwards 1st Marquis of Waterford, secured the famous architect James Wyatt to design the next phase of modernisation of Curraghmore. Here he created a series of rooms, with decoration considered by many to be among his most successful in Ireland.
The present day de la Poer Beresfords are country people by tradition. Farming, hunting, breeding hounds and horses and an active social calendar continues as it did centuries ago. Weekly game-shooting parties are held every season (Nov. through Jan.) and in spring, calves, foals and lambs can be seen in abundance on Curraghmore's verdant fields. Polo is still played on the estate in summer.
Throughout Ireland's turbulent history, this family have never been 'absentee landlords' and they still provide diverse employment for a number of local people.
Change comes slowly to Curraghmore - table linen, cutlery and dishes from the early nineteenth century are still in use.

We also went to PortLaw today to.... to see all pictures CLICK HERE!

My World Lit. Class

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