Powerscourt House

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Not to be confused with Powerscourt House, Dublin
Powerscourt House
County Wicklow
Powerscourt Fountain.JPG
The facade at Powerscourt
Location
Grid reference: SG20377348
Location: 53°11’5"N, 6°11’13"W
Town: Enniskerry
History
Built 1731-1741
For: Richard Wingfield,
1st Viscount Powerscourt
by Richard Cassels
Country house
Palladian
Information
Website: www.powerscourt.com

Powerscourt House is a grand country house presiding over the Powerscourt Estate in Enniskerry, County Wicklow. The country estate has extensive landscaped gardens extending over 47 acres.

The house originated as a 13th-century castle, but was extensively altered during the 18th century by German architect Richard Cassels, starting in 1731 and finishing in 1741.[1] A fire in 1974 left the house lying as a shell until it was renovated in 1996.

Originally the family seat of the Viscounts Powerscourt, the estate has been owned by the Slazenger family, founders and former owners of the Slazenger sporting goods business, since 1961. It is a popular tourist attraction, and includes Powerscourt Golf Club, an Avoca Handweavers restaurant, and an Autograph Collection Hotel.

There is also Powerscourt House, Dublin, which was the townhouse of the viscount.

History

13th-century house

The original owner of the 13th-century castle was a man by the name of La Poer, which was eventually anglicised to "Power." The castle's position was of strategic military importance because the castle's owner could control access to the nearby Dargle, Glencree and Glencullen rivers.

The three-story house had at least 68 rooms. The entrance hall, where family heirlooms were displayed, was 60 feet long and 40 feet wide. The main reception rooms were on the first floor rather than on the ground floor, the more typical location. A mile-long avenue of beech trees leads to the house.

18th-century house

Powerscourt Estate

During the 16th century the house came into the ownership of the Powerscourt family. The family rose in wealth and prominence, and in the 18th century Richard Wingfield, 1st Viscount Powerscourt commissioned the architect Richard Cassels to extensively alter and remodel the mediæval castle to create a modern country house. Work started in 1731 and finished in 1741.

On a commanding hilltop position, Cassels deviated slightly from his usual sombre style, giving the house something of what John Vanbrugh would have called the 'castle air.' This is most noticeable in the structure's severe Palladian facade bookended by two circular domed towers.

The hall at Powerscourt House, circa 1890

King George IV was the guest of Richard Wingfield, 5th Viscount Powerscourt in August 1821. In the 1830s, the house was the venue for a number of conferences on unfulfilled Bible prophecies, which were attended by men such as John Nelson Darby and Edward Irving. These conferences were held under the auspices of Theodosia Wingfield Powerscourt, then the dowager Lady Powerscourt. Her letters and papers were republished in 2004, including summaries of the Powerscourt prophetic conferences.[2][3]

19th-century gardens

Japanese gardens at Powerscourt Estate

In 1844, at the age of 8, Mervyn Wingfield, 7th Viscount Powerscourt inherited the title and the Powerscourt estate, which comprised 49,000 acres of land in Ireland. When he reached the age of 21, he embarked on an extensive renovation of the house and created the new gardens.

Main attractions on the grounds include the Tower Valley (with stone tower), Japanese gardens, winged horse statues, Triton Lake, pet cemetery, Dolphin Pond, walled gardens, Bamberg Gate and the Italian Garden. The Pepperpot Tower is said to be designed after a favoured 3-inch pepperpot of Lady Wingfield. Of particular note is the pets cemetery, whose tombstones have been described as "astonishingly personal".

Inspiration for the garden design followed visits by Powerscourt to ornamental gardens at the Palace of Versailles, Schönbrunn Palace near Vienna, and Schwetzingen Castle near Heidelberg. The garden development took 20 years to complete in 1880.

20th-century fire and renovation

Powerscourt House and Italian gardens

In 1961, the estate, was sold by the 9th Viscount, Mervyn Patrick Wingfield, to the Slazenger family, who still own it to this day. Wendy Slazenger, daughter of the late Ralph Slazenger, married the 10th Viscount, Mervyn Niall Wingfield, in 1962. Through her children, the 11th Viscount - Mervyn Anthony Wingfield - and the Hon. Julia Wingfield, there remains a strong connection between the two families and Powerscourt Estate.

The house was destroyed by fire on 4 November 1974 and was subsequently renovated in 1996. Only two rooms are open to the public as they once appeared while Powerscourt had residents, while the rest of ground floor and first floor are now retail units.

In 2011, the Lonely Planet voted Powerscourt in the Top Ten Houses in the World while in 2014, National Geographic listed Powerscourt as No. 3 in the World's Top Ten Gardens.

21st century

Tara's Palace Museum of Childhood

Tara's Palace Museum of Childhood relocated from Malahide Castle near Dublin to Powerscourt House in June 2011. The museum features dollhouses, miniatures, dolls, historic toys and Tara's Palace, one of the greatest dollshouses in the world, on a par with the Fairy Castle at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago and Queen Mary's Dolls' House at Windsor Castle and the Astolat Dollhouse Castle displayed in New York.

Waterfall

Main article: Powerscourt Waterfall

The waterfall

Powerscourt Waterfall and its surrounding valley are also owned by the Powerscourt estate, although the two pieces of land are no longer directly connected. At 397 feet, it is the highest waterfall in Ireland. In 1858, the seventh Viscount Powerscourt established a deer park around the waterfall, resulting in the successful introduction of the Japanese Sika to Ireland.

Regular bus service from Powerscourt to the waterfall was discontinued in 2005, though during the high summer season, intermittent bus services are still available. The waterfall is four and a half miles from Enniskerry, and walkable. While the distance is not prohibitive, walking can be dangerous, as the road is narrow, and lacks a shoulder for long stretches.

A separate entrance fee is required for access to the waterfall.[4]

Golf Club

Powerscourt Golf Club, located at the Powerscourt Estate is home to two par 72, 18-hole courses: the East, which was created first, and the West. Both contain fast greens and hilly fairways, and they are each over 6,900 yards long. In 1998, the East Course was host to the Irish PGA Championship.[5][6]

The Estate on film

Powerscourt House and the Estate have frequently appeared in films and on television. They have been filming locations for:

  • Barry Lyndon
  • Moll Flanders
  • Into the Badlands (Season 2)
  • The Count of Monte Cristo (2002)[7]
  • David Copperfield (2000)
  • Where's Jack? (1969)
  • The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse]] (2005), involving King William III and Queen Mary
  • Excalibur (1981): Arthur fights Lancelot at the Waterfall
  • "Honeymoon for One"[8]

In David Dickinson's series of novels about the Victorian detective (Goodnight Sweet Prince, Death And The Jubilee, Death Called To The Bar), Powerscourt House is the ancestral home of the fictional Lord Francis Powerscourt.

The gardens were used to record Celtic Woman's Songs from the Heart DVD and TV special.

The Slazenger family invited Lynn Garrison to relocate his aerial film unit, aircraft collection and hangars, from Leixlip to the Powersourt airfield in 1973. The collection featured in Irish productions, including:

  • The Blue Max
  • Darling Lili
  • Zeppelin
  • Von Richthofen and Brown

The collection remained here until 1981.

Outside links

References