Doneraile Court

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Doneraile Court

County Cork

Doneraile Court - geograph.org.uk - 1392610.jpg
Type: Country house
Location
Grid reference: R60210730
Location: 52°12’59"N, 8°34’59"W
Village: Doneraile
History
Built late-17th century
Country house
Information
Owned by: Heritage Ireland

Doneraile Court is a late-17th century country house in County Cork, which stands in 400 acres of walled parkland near the town of Doneraile. It remained the seat of the St Leger family from that time until the mid-20th century. [1] [2]

The park is open all year with free admission. The house is being restored.

History

The estate, together with other lands, was purchased in 1629 by Sir William St. Leger, Lord President of Munster, who moved into the 13th-century Doneraile Castle. By 1645 the castle had been attacked and burned several times and was so badly damaged that it had to be abandoned.

The present house was constructed in its place in the late 1600s, utilising some of the stonework of the old castle. It was extensively remodelled and the current facade added in 1725 by architect Isaac Rothery. Over the years various extensions were added such as an octagonal kitchen and game store built in 1869. A dining room built at the same time and a nine bay Gothic Revival style conservatory built in 1825 have since been demolished. Other improvements within the estate included cottages, lodges, farm buildings and stables. The St. Leger family owned and bred horses for hunting and racing on the estate.

In 1870 the Doneraile demesne covered some 8,000 acres in and around Doneraile, but was gradually reduced in size by the sale of land to tenants under the various Land Acts of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The remaining demesne land, which now comprises Doneraile Wildlife Park, was sold to the government in 1943, followed by the house itself in 1969 when the last St Leger occupier left.

When Doneraile Court was the residence of Lord Castletown, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., who had been a soldier in the American Civil War, and became a lawyer and United States Supreme Court justice, carried on an extensive correspondence with Clare, Lady Castletown. He visited Doneraile on several occasions, and may have had an affair with her.

The grounds in the vicinity of the house is laid out in the style of Capability Brown whilst the deer park contains Killarney Red, Sika and Fallow deer and the meadows a herd of Kerry cattle.

References