Showing up to 15 places from this collection.
Gosford CastleCounty Armagh • BT60 1PH • Historic Places
Situated in Armagh close to the border of County Down, Gosford Castle is 14 miles south of Craigavon.
The castle was built of local granite in a Norman Revival style with a crenellated three storey keep and huge round tower. The entrance has two drum like towers at each side and a curved bay window above. It is set in 11 acres of landscaped gardens and parkland which also contain a walled garden.
Today the castle appears the same on the outside but inside it is very different; it has been made into 23 individual apartments ranging from one to four storeys in height.
Facilities
Some of the castle's apartments are available to rent, including one in the stable yard, and another in the east wing.
The stable yard apartment can sleep up to 5 guests in three bedrooms; it features large granite arches, high ceilings with oak beams and a limestone fireplace with cast iron stove.
The east tower apartment sleeps up to 4 people in 2 bedrooms and also has high ceilings with views over the castle and courtyard.
Gosford Castle was designed by the architect Thomas Hooper for the 2nd Earl of Gosford, Archibald Acheson, construction began in 1819 with funds provided by his wife. She chose to have the castle built in a Norman revival style as she was a friend of Lord Byron's wife and preferred something romantic. The castle was not completed until the 1850's but with its 197 rooms was the largest house in Ireland.
In 1921 the contents of the castle were sold by the 4th Earl to pay off gambling debts and due to lack of funds the castle fell it into disrepair. The Second World War saw the castle used as a prisoner of war camp and it was even the winter headquarters for a traveling circus in later years.
In 1958 the Ministry of Agriculture bought the estate and established Gosford Forest Park and the castle. The castle was in need of urgent work and in 1978 a development company was granted on a 99 year lease to develop private homes on the site. Due to difficulties with the developer the council regained possession of the castle in 2002 and sold it to the Boyd partnership who took on the task of changing the Grade A listed building into private dwellings.
Moyry CastleCounty Armagh • BT35 8JD • Historic Places
Moyry Castle near Jonesborough in County Armagh, Northern Ireland, is a ruined early seventeenth-century fortification overlooking the strategically vital Gap of the North, the Moyry Pass that formed the main route between Leinster and Ulster and the most important military corridor in medieval and early modern Ireland. The castle was built by Lord Mountjoy in 1601 during his campaign to suppress the Ulster rebellion of Hugh O'Neill, constructed to secure the pass and prevent reinforcement of O'Neill's forces from the south. The compact three-storey tower with its four round corner turrets is an unusually complete plantation-era fortification, giving a clear impression of the military architecture used to consolidate English control of Ulster following the Nine Years' War.
Tandragee CastleCounty Armagh • BT62 2NE • Historic Places
Tandragee Castle is a nineteenth-century Gothic Revival castle in the town of Tandragee in County Armagh, Northern Ireland, built on the site of earlier castle remains overlooking the town and the River Cusher valley. The building is now occupied by Tayto, one of Northern Ireland's most famous food brands, producing the popular Tayto crisps that are a beloved part of Northern Irish food culture. The combination of nineteenth-century Gothic castle and crisp factory represents one of the more unusual heritage uses of a historic building in Northern Ireland, and the Tayto crisp brand has created a tourist attraction in its own right at the castle, with tours of the crisp factory and a visitor attraction that celebrates the extraordinary cultural status of the Tayto brand in Northern Irish identity.