Cottage House, Clonmoyle

Cottage House
Location Clonmoyle East, County Cork, Ireland
Coordinates 51°55′59″N 8°46′35″W / 51.93306°N 8.77639°WCoordinates: 51°55′59″N 8°46′35″W / 51.93306°N 8.77639°W
Type Country house
Site notes
Ownership Private
Public access No

Cottage House is a country house in the townland of Clonmoyle East, situated 3.1 km (1.9 mi) south-east of Aghabullogue village and 4.4 km (2.7 mi) north of Coachford village. The house and demesne were dominant features in the rural landscape of Ireland, throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Location often reflected the distribution of better land, and this is evidenced in mid-Cork, where many of these houses were situated along the valley of the River Lee and its tributaries.[1]

Cottage House was once a Pyne family residence. Lewis (1837) describes the parish of Aghabologue as containing numerous large and elegant houses, to include 'the Cottage, of J. Pyne, Esq.' [2] The tithe applotment book for the townland of Clonmoyle East records 'John Pyne, Esq.' as occupying 127 acres.[3]

The Landed Estates Database advises that Cottage was originally a Vize residence, and later occupied by the Pyne family, Following the death of John Pyne in 1837, the property was left to his nephew, Reverend John Paul Lawless, 'who took the name and arms of Pyne'.[4]

According to the Ordnance Survey name book c. 1840, the townland was the property of Rev. J.L. Pyne and Molly Davis, principally being excellent ground under cultivation, with some bog and furze running through it. Cottage was described as a fine house with good offices attached, built by Rev. John Lawless Pine of Cloyne, and at the time being the residence of Richard Ellard, Esq. A 'good deal' of ornamental ground was said to surround it.

By the mid-nineteenth century, the Primary Valuation of Ireland (Griffith's Valuation) records Rev. John Lawless Pine as immediate lessor of the property, which was then unoccupied, and valued at c. £17. Pyne was also recorded as the occupier of c. 1 acre of 'plantation'.[5]

Today it remains a private residence, and is not accessible to the public.

See also

References

  1. et al. (1997). Archaeological inventory of county Cork, volume 3. Dublin: Stationery Office. |first1= missing |last1= in Authors list (help)
  2. Lewis, Samuel. A topographical dictionary of Ireland. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  3. "Tithe Apploment Books, National Archives of Ireland" (PDF). Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  4. "Landed Estates Database". Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  5. "Ask about Ireland, Griffith's Valuation".

External links