Drimnagh Castle

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Drimnagh Castle

County Dublin


Drimnagh Castle
Location
Grid reference: O11123179
Location: 53°19’30"N, 6°19’58"W
City: Dublin
History
Information

Drimnagh Castle is a Norman castle located in Drimnagh, a suburb of Dublin. It is the only remaining castle in Ireland with a flooded moat around it; this moat is fed by a small local river, the Camac.

Drimnagh Castle Secondary School is next to the site of the castle.

History

The earliest recorded owner of Drimnagh Castle was Sir Hugh de Bernival,[1] whose name is recorded in state papers relating to Ireland in 1216. His family, owners of Drimnagh Castle for centuries, were later known as Barnewell, sometimes Barnewall.

While the Barnewall family first built a fortification here in the mid-13th century,[2] the main remaining structures of the castle date to the early 15th-century.[1] The buildings within the moat consist of a 15th-century great hall with an attached 16th or 17th-century tower. There is also a large early-20th-century stone building on the site which was at times used as a stable, a ballroom, and a coach house.

By the mid-19th century, the castle was owned by the then Marquess of Lansdowne. Samuel Lewis's Topographical Dictionary of Ireland printed 1837 noted it as an "irregular pile", the "property of the Marquess of Lansdowne [..] occupied by Mr. E. Cavanagh".[3]

Twentieth century

Drimnagh Castle circa 1900

In the very early 20th century, the castle and its lands were bought by Joseph Hatch, a dairy man, of Lower Leeson Street in Dublin and a member of Dublin City Council. He bought the castle in the early 1900s to provide grazing land for his cattle. He restored the castle, which became a summer home for his family and a location for the celebration of the silver wedding anniversary of Joseph Hatch and his wife, Mary Connell, as well as the marriage of their eldest daughter, Mary, in 1910.

Occupied by the Hatch family until the mid-1950s,[1] Drimnagh Castle was left by Louis Hatch to Dr P Dunne, Bishop of Nara,[4] who sold it (reportedly for a nominal sum) to the Christian Brothers to build the school that now stands there. Initially the Christian Brothers lived and ran a school there until 1956, when they moved to their new schools and monastery close by.

In 1978, the local An Caisleán Gaelic Athletic Association club (now St James Gaels GAA club), took possession of the castle's coach-house and renovated it to give them a clubhouse, hall, kitchen and changing rooms with adjoining showers

By the mid-1980s the castle was a ruin with fallen roofs, missing windows and partly collapsed masonry. In 1986 Peter Pearson, an artist working with An Taisce, the national trust for Ireland, set up a local committee and got the state training authority, involved in a conservation and restoration programme. All work was carried out by hand; the construction of a 15th-century mediæval oak roof over the great hall, mullioned stone windows, lime mortars for building stone and plastering and wood carving in oak. A formal mediæval–style garden was also created.[5]

Drimnagh Castle re-opened to the public in 1991, with additional restoration work continuing through the 1990s.

Film location

A number of movies and television productions have been filmed at Drimnagh Castle, including:

  • The Abduction Club (2002)
  • Ella Enchanted (2004)
  • The Tudors (2007).[6]

Outside links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Drimnagh Castle, Long Mile Road, Dublin 12, Dublin City". National Inventory of Architectural Heritage. http://www.buildingsofireland.ie/niah/search.jsp?type=record&county=DU&regno=50080451. Retrieved 11 September 2019. 
  2. "Drimnagh Castle". Dublin City Council. 2010. https://www.dublincity.ie/dublin-buildings/drimnagh-castle. Retrieved 11 September 2019. 
  3. Lewis, Samuel: 'A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland' (S. Lewis and Co., 1842)
  4. "Castle Bequest to Bishop". The Irish Times. 9 January 1953. 
  5. "Drimnagh Castle Opens To Public". RTÉ Archives. RTÉ. https://www.rte.ie/archives/2016/0525/790930-drimnagh-castle-opens-to-public/. Retrieved 10 September 2019. 
  6. "Films at Drimnagh Castle". https://www.drimnaghcastle.org/films-. Retrieved 11 September 2019.