Main Page | See live article | Alphabetical index

Ardbraccan House

Ardbraccan House (known sometimes historically as Ardbraccan Palace) is a large Palladian county house in County Meath in the Republic of Ireland. The historic house served from the 1770s to 1885 as the residence of the Church of Ireland Lord Bishop of Meath.

Table of contents
1 The building of the house
2 The controversy of Catholic gravestones
3 Sale by the Church of Ireland
4 The House today
5 See also
6 External links

The building of the house

Ardbraccan itself had been the location of the residence of a bishop for over one thousand years, first of the Bishop of Ardbraccan and later following the merger of many small dioceses into the Diocese of Meath as the residence of the Bishop of Meath. By the middle ages a large tudor house, containing its own church, known as St. Mary's, stood on the site. However in 1734 Bishop Arthur Price decided to replace the decaying mansion with a new georgian residence. Initially the two wings of the house were built, before the main four bay two storey block of the house was completed in the 1770s. It was partly designed by the acclaimed eighteenth century architect Richard Castle.

The controversy of Catholic gravestones

Legend suggested that gravestones from a neighbouring Roman Catholic cemetery at Markiestown, some miles away, were removed and used as the steps into the servants' quarters in the residence. Whether that was an urban myth based on the intense rivalry between the state-established Church of Ireland and the local predominantly Roman Catholic population in Bohermeen (who were subject to the discriminatory Penal Laws and forced to pay tithes to the Church of Ireland) or had some basis in fact, is unclear. It is possible that the house utilised stone from the derelict pre-Reformation church at the cemetery, though it was notable that from the mid to late eighteenth century the cemetery was denuded of all gravestones.

Sale by the Church of Ireland

The new bishop's palace became famous for the quality of its architecture. Funded by government grants and locally paid tithes, the Church of Ireland bishop held court from the mansion, which was the centre of a large agricultural demesne. However the disestablishment of the Church of Ireland in 1871, following the previous scrapping of Roman Catholic-paid tithes, fatally weakened the economic survival of the bishop's estate, which was left totally reliant on the small local Church of Ireland community, and in 1885 the bishop sold the estate and house, moving to a smaller mansion nearby (which Church of Ireland continued to live until 1958 and which was then sold to a Roman Catholic religious order, the Holy Ghost Fathers). Ardbraccan House was bought by Hugh Law, the son of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland and remained in the ownership of his descendants until sold by Colonel Owen Foster in 1985 to Tara Mines who used it as a guest residence for visiting businessmen.

The House today

In the late 1990s the house once again changed hands. The new owners invested large sums to complete restore the mansion to its pristine state. In 2002 the restoration of Ardbraccan House won the Án Taisce Best Restoration of a Private Building award. It is now open to the public.

In the early 2000s it was controversially decided to build a major new motorway linking Clonee and Kells through part of the house's historic demense. The Irish Georgian Society and environmentalists criticised the proposal. The motorway would also pass through the prestine parkland of a religious seminary called Dalgan Park and close by the historic Hill of Tara, seat of the ancient Árd Rí na hÉireann (High King of Ireland). The motorway has yet to be built, though full planning permission has been granted.

See also

External links