Reg No
40401623
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Technical
Original Use
Bridge
In Use As
Bridge
Date
1700 - 1720
Coordinates
245245, 311593
Date Recorded
05/06/2012
Date Updated
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Six-arched limestone road bridge over Annalee River, built c.1710. Roughly coursed rubble limestone elevations with elliptical arches having cut-stone arch rings. V-cutwaters to both elevations, rising as piers to roughly squared string course over extrados, alternate piers carried up to parapet level to form pedestrian refuges at road level. Road face of parapets of squared limestone with flush coping of large punch-dressed sandstone blocks. Wing wall at western end widened over trabeated section with original arch beneath.
Ballyhaise Bridge appears on Hermann Moll’s Map of Ireland of 1714 and is likewise depicted in an early eighteenth-century topographical view of Ballyhaise Demesne, before the house was remodelled by Richard Castle. This early view shows that the form of the bridge with prominent cutwaters has not changed since that time (c.1710). The bridge was consciously positioned on a central axis with Ballyhaise House, and is a reminder of the earlier formally laid-out demesne which preceded the later eighteenth-century naturalistic English-style landscape shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1837.