Saturday, April 7, 2018

Lehenaghmore House - Kathleen O'Keeffe ( Author )

Lehenaghmore House was built circa 1730 by the Newenham Family who had been granted most of the Townland during the Cromwellian Confiscations of the 1680s. It would appear that from the outset the Family intended to simply let the land to tenants and built two other houses - Lehenagh House ( famous for being the sometime home of Fr. Theobald Matthew ) and Marian House around the same time to entice wealthy patrons.


Only photograph of Lehenaghmore House


In 1857 the House and 57 Acres were sold to John Gibbings under the Encumbered Estates Act who passed the house onto William Gibbings who died in 1912. As before the house was let out to various tenants including the Brownes and Cotters. In 1919 Lunham Bros. and Henry Denny & Sons leased some of the land for disposal of slaughterhouse waste which resulted in an influx of rats. In May 1924 the House and 16 Acres were sold to John Collins , an Accountant who lived on Togher Road. In June 1932 he sold the House and some land around the House to Cecil Guy Marlow.


Nora ( Ciss ) Ryan 1970


In November 1941 , Patrick Ryan who had come home from America after winning the Irish Hospital Sweepstakes , bought Lehenaghmore House and 14 Acres plus another 63 Acres from A.H. Good which included a milk round known as Lehenaghmore Dairies. They employed a lot of local people on the farm and in the House , including their cousin Jimmy Roche , Father of local Kathleen O'Keeffe of Westside Estate ( Jimmy's Aunt " Ciss " was married to Paddy ) .


 Original wooden milk crate found in House
( Photo courtesy of Derek Good )


During the Emergency ( a.k.a. World War II ) the entrance pillars leading into the house had the titular " Lehenaghmore House " removed for fear of invading British or Germans so as not to inform them of their location , as did all other Big Houses in Togher. It should be noted that Jimmy Roche helped plant the row of palm trees with Patrick Ryan in the early 1940s which like the pillars are still there. It should also be noted that the Pillars are one of only two structures in Togher legally protected and listed! In the early 1960s Patrick Ryan sold some of his land to Bradley Bros. who built Greenwood Estate. In May 1973 , the house and lands were finally sold off and ultimately in 1979 , Palmbury Orchard was under construction. During this interim , the house fell into disrepair and was subject to vandalism and inevitably was demolished by O'Brien & Flynn builders.


Noreen Ryan 1960s inside 
walls of Lehenaghmore House


Paddy Ryan died in 1973 while his wife " Ciss " passed away in the 1980s.
Paddy's son Jimmy still lives in Doughcloyne and his two Daughters Noreen and Margaret now live in Bishopstown. All are in their 70s now. One other sibling - Patrick jnr - lives in Kilcully. Two siblings Jerry and Thomas passed away some years ago.


 
 Jimmy Roche with Patrick Ryan jnr.


Kathleen O'Keeffe: " ....I remember my Father coming home with a bucket full of rosy apples that my Grand Aunt had given him....was so honest he wouldn't take them himself....I loved going up there as a child....It was like being in a different era...I was always fascinated by that house , the very size of it alone . I can still see my Grand Aunt Ciss and Paddy sitting at each side of the fireplace. "


 Gates to former 
Lehenaghmore House


All that remains of the once great house are the Pillars and several remnants of the Orchard walls and partial segments of the roadside wall which can still be seen today in Palmbury Orchard Estate and at intervals along Lehenaghmore Hill. At present the Tidy Towns committee are undertaking a long overdue restoration of the Pillars and Gate.


 Entrance lined with original
Palm trees from 1940s


Remains of Orchard Wall


Remains of Roadside wall across from former
Southern Fruit premises


19th Century OSi Map of Lehenaghmore House


1951 Aerial Photo of Lehenaghmore House

4 comments:

Pat Orourke said...

A great article Kathleen

Robert Ryan said...

Lovely pictures!

Anonymous said...

Where did you get your sources for this?

Anonymous said...

I am the granddaughter of Cecil Guy Marlow and I live in Dublin. Thank you for the interesting information. A lot of my relatives on my grandfather’s side lived in Sunday’s Well. Linda V. L. Molloy nee Powell