Tyrone House, Dublin

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Alternative namesWaterford House
TypeHouse
Architectural stylePalladian
LocationThe Department of Education,
Marlborough Street, Dublin, Ireland
Tyrone House
An illustration of the house in the 1770s before the removal of the central venetian window and the addition of a portico.
Tyrone House, Dublin is located in Central Dublin
Tyrone House, Dublin
Location within Central Dublin
Alternative namesWaterford House
General information
TypeHouse
Architectural stylePalladian
LocationThe Department of Education,
Marlborough Street, Dublin, Ireland
Coordinates53°21′02″N 6°15′28″W / 53.350685°N 6.257825°W / 53.350685; -6.257825
Current tenantsDepartment of Education
Completed1740
Renovated1836
Cost£25,000[1]
OwnerOffice of Public Works
Technical details
MaterialGranite
Floor count3 over basement
Design and construction
ArchitectRichard Cassels
DeveloperMarcus Beresford, 1st Earl of Tyrone
Renovating team
ArchitectJacob Owen (1835)

Tyrone House is a Georgian Palladian style mansion townhouse built for Marcus Beresford, 1st Earl of Tyrone in 1740. It was constructed on lands bordering Marlborough Street in what was to become a fashionable part of North Dublin city off Sackville Street. It was one of the first substantial aristocratic houses built on the North side of Dublin city.[2][3]

The house was situated overlooking Marlborough Bowling Green, which was then a fashionable enclave where the wealthy elite could socialize until it fell out of favour following the death of Lord Delvin in a duel in 1761.[4]

1834 sale and change of use

The Model School (1838)

The area around the house had traditionally been part of the lands of St. Mary's Abbey and had later partially included lands which were granted to Jonathon Amory in 1675, later referred to as the Amory Grant.

The area surrounding the house later became fashionable in Georgian Dublin due to the existence of the Marlborough Bowling Green and Pleasure Gardens. As early as 1728 the bowling green at the strand is mentioned in the Dublin Weekly Journal.[5] Later in 1753, a musical evening and fireworks display is recorded as having occurred to raise funds for the construction of a wooden bridge across the Liffey to benefit the wealthy patrons south of the river.[6]

The 1st earl died at the house in 1763 and the house was left to his son, George Beresford, styled the Marquess of Waterford in 1789. As a result, the house was often called Waterford House on maps during that period.[7] He also gave his name to nearby Waterford Street.

Nearby Beresford Place was later named in honour of the first earl's grandson, John Claudius Beresford upon its construction in the 1790s.

Stables were constructed on Marlborough Street near the house and a riding school referred to as Beresford's Riding School was established and used to train the yeomanry around the time of the Irish Rebellion of 1798.[8][9]

In 1834 the house and five adjoining acres were sold for £7,000 to the National Education Commissioners. The house later became part of the Department of Education's campus which also encompasses the original model school as well as a facsimile of the altered version of Tyrone House, both of which were designed by Jacob Owen a few years after the purchase.[10][11]

In the second half of the 19th century, a statue of Sir Alexander Macdonnell, 1st Baronet by Thomas Farrell was erected in the grounds of the house.[12]

As of 2022, the house has been partially restored to its former glory and is an administrative building which forms part of the Department of Education's main campus. An illustrated image of the house often features as part of the logo on the headed notepaper and official correspondence issued by the department.

Tyrone Ghost Story

A well-known ghost story relates to the house concerning the appearance of Lord Tyrone as a ghost to prove the existence of life after death.[13][14][15] In 1948, an unknown author and artist Ed Moritz adapted the ghost story into a 2-page comic for the first issue of the American Comics Group horror anthology Adventures into the Unknown.[16]

Design and construction

References

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