Dripsey Castle Bridge: Difference between revisions

From Wikishire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
RB (talk | contribs)
Created page with "{{Infobox bridge |name=Dripsey Castle Bridge |county=Cork |picture= |picture caption= |os grid ref=W47707552 |latitude=51.9297222 |longitude=-8.7611111 |crosses=Unnamed stream..."
 
RB (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
Line 7: Line 7:
|latitude=51.9297222
|latitude=51.9297222
|longitude=-8.7611111
|longitude=-8.7611111
|crosses=Unnamed stream
|crosses=Dripsey River
|carries=Millview Terrace
|carries=Millview Terrace
|type=
|type=
Line 16: Line 16:
|ownership=
|ownership=
}}
}}
'''Dripsey Castle Bridge''' in [[County Cork]] carries a lane, named Millview Terrace, over a minor stream that soon joins the [[Dripsey River]], two miles north-east of [[Coachford]] village, just under a mile north-west of [[Dripsey]] village.  It was built around 1780.
'''Dripsey Castle Bridge''' in [[County Cork]] carries a lane, named Millview Terrace, over the [[Dripsey River]], two miles north-east of [[Coachford]] village, just under a mile north-west of [[Dripsey]] village.  It was built around 1780.


The bridge stands at the meeting point of [[Carrignamuck]] and Meeshal [[townland]]s.
The bridge stands at the meeting point of [[Carrignamuck]] and Meeshal [[townland]]s.

Latest revision as of 18:15, 10 December 2021

Dripsey Castle Bridge
County Cork
Location
Carrying: Millview Terrace
Crossing: Dripsey River
Location
Grid reference: W47707552
Location: 51°55’47"N, 8°45’40"W
Structure
History
Built c. 1780
Information

Dripsey Castle Bridge in County Cork carries a lane, named Millview Terrace, over the Dripsey River, two miles north-east of Coachford village, just under a mile north-west of Dripsey village. It was built around 1780.

The bridge stands at the meeting point of Carrignamuck and Meeshal townlands.

In the Ordnance Survey name book of 1840, this bridge is referred to as a small stone bridge, one-eight of a mile to the south-west of Hayfield House. The National Inventory of Architectural Heritage describes it as a triple-arch humpback road bridge built around 1780.

The bridge has rubble stone walls, concrete capping to the parapet, arches with dressed stone voussoirs, and v-shaped cutwaters on its east and west elevations. The bridge's name is from the grand house nearby; Dripsey Castle.

The entrance to Dripsey Castle stands beside the bridge as a gate lodge and an ornamental tower.

See also

Outside links

References