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Staff of Curraghmore House, Co Waterford, c. 1905. Curraghmore near Portlaw, County Waterford, Ireland, is a historic house and estate and the seat of the Marquess of Waterford. The estate was part of the grant of land made to Sir Roger le Puher (la Poer) by Henry II in 1177 after the Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland. [3]
Hillview is a housing estate in Waterford, Ireland. The entrance to Hillview is centered on the Roanmore/De La Salle GAA pitches and Kyle Curran park; [1] the latter being named after an 8-year-old child from Hillview who was murdered in 1987. [2] Hillview (Oakwood) is served by Bus Éireann route W5. [3]
Ballybeg (Irish: Baile Beag) is a largely working class district in Waterford, Ireland. The area consists of four council housing estates - Ballybeg, Priory Lawn, Clonard Park and Ardmore Park, and a private housing estate, Glencarra. [citation needed] As of 2007, the community was reported as being "approximately 750 houses".
This is a list of historic houses in the Republic of Ireland which serves as a link page for any stately home or historic house in Ireland. County Carlow [ edit ]
Woodhouse is a Georgian mansion and c. 500-acre estate just outside the village of Stradbally, County Waterford, Ireland. The original house was built in the early part of the 16th century by the Fitzgeralds (a branch of the Desmond Geraldines) and was owned by them up to 1724. [1]
Mount Congreve house and gardens. Mount Congreve is a 17th-century Georgian estate and mansion situated near the village of Kilmeaden in County Waterford, Ireland.The architect was John Roberts, a Waterford-based architect who subsequently designed and built most of the 18th-century public buildings in Waterford, including both cathedrals.
The current house was built in 1779. It is believed to have been designed by John Roberts, a noted Waterford architect. [2] The building is a detached seven-bay two-storey over basement house surrounded by notable formal gardens and landscaped grounds which are open to the public.
Villierstown (Irish: An Baile Nua, meaning 'the new town') [2] is a village in west County Waterford, Ireland. It is situated on the banks of the River Blackwater, and was founded in the 1740s by a local landlord, John Villiers, as a base for the linen industry, and initially populated primarily from Lurgan. In the census of 2016, the ...