Monalty House, MONALTYBANE Td., Carrickmacross, County Monaghan
Revisiting Monalty House from the perspective of the owner Alan Hughes:
Introduction
Monalty House dates to the 1760s although evidence of an earlier house on the site comes in the form of a survey (1735) commissioned by Viscount Weymouth where it is shown as a dormered single-storey house approached by a tree-lined avenue. The original layout of Monalty House is fully intact with sixteen rooms across three storeys, a central hallway divided into two, and a full basement. A three-storey bathroom return was added in 1910 by the well-known architect and engineer, William Samuel Barber (1877/8-1941), and includes seven stained glass windows in a simple Art Nouveau style.
Monalty House is of historical interest. The Gartlan family, distillers and members of the emergent Catholic class, took a lease of the house in 1805. Thomas McEvoy Gartlan (1800-86) hosted Daniel O’Connell (1775-1847) in April 1843 on the eve of a monster meeting held in Carrickmacross to muster support for the repeal of the Act of Union. Some years later the Gartlans offered labour to the local community during the Famine (1845-9). A local historian, Laurence McDermott, notes how the family ‘did its utmost to relieve the suffering of the poor and destitute’ while Professor Terence Dooley of the Centre for the Study of Historic Irish Houses and Estates, Maynooth University, recalls how the family ’employed labourers, provided spades and paid them one penny a day to dig the front park’: archaeological evidence of this privately-funded Famine Relief Scheme survives today.
Thomas Aloysius Gartlan (1837-91) purchased Monalty House under the provisions of the Purchase of Land (Ireland) Act, 1885, and added an orchard and iron gates of delicate design to its designed landscape. The estate was a hive of activity with agricultural labourers living locally in houses built for them by the family.
Monalty House, which is approaching its tercentenary, has been occupied by only three families: the Steeles, the Gartlans and the Hughes. The last named family purchased Monalty House in 1930 when plans (1928) by the Monaghan County Board of Health and Public Assistance to adapt it as a hospital or nursing home came to nothing. Professor Dooley notes how the Hughes family have ‘spent their lives maintaining the residence, its out-offices, and its woodland, adhering to best practice, using original material to maintain the original architectural integrity, for example, recycling original slates and using local stone of the maintenance of the surrounding entrance walls’.
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