Bessborough House

Bessborough House
1818 illustration of the house
Bessborough House is located in Ireland
Bessborough House
General information
TypeHouse
Architectural stylePalladian
Town or cityPiltown
CountryIreland
Coordinates52°21′15″N 7°18′51″W / 52.354125°N 7.3141555°W / 52.354125; -7.3141555
Current tenantsKildalton Agricultural College (Teagasc)
Named forElizabeth Folliott, wife of Sir John Ponsonby
Construction started1744
Renovated1929 following arson in 1923
OwnerDepartment of Agriculture, Food and the Marine
Height30 m (98 ft)
Technical details
Materiallimestone
Floor count3
Design and construction
Architect(s)Francis Bindon
DeveloperBrabazon Ponsonby, 1st Earl of Bessborough

Bessborough House is a large Georgian house near Piltown, County Kilkenny, and was the family seat of the Ponsonby dynasty, Earls of Bessborough.[1]

Originally built in the 1740s for the 1st Earl of Bessborough. It was designed by Francis Bindon.[2] The house was gutted by fire in February 1923, during the Irish Civil War.[3] However, it was rebuilt in late 1929 for The 9th Earl of Bessborough, who served as the 14th Governor General of Canada in the early 1930s.[4] The 9th Lord Bessborough sold the house in the late 1930s.

Kildalton Castle and estate were owned by the Dalton Family, and was awarded to Colonel John Ponsonby, one of the leaders of the Cromwellian invasion of Ireland.[5]

The Oblate Fathers who established a seminary there in 1941, over the following 30 years some 360 were ordained for the order there, they would study philosophy at UCD and theology at the Our Lady's Scholasticate in Bessbrough.

Bessborough House was sold by the Oblates in 1971 to the Department of Agriculture and was opened in 1980 as Kildalton Agricultural College.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Bessborough Papers" (PDF). nli.ie. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  2. ^ "Bessborough House (Kildalton College), KILDALTON, Piltown, County Kilkenny". Buildings of Ireland.
  3. ^ "1744 – Bessborough House, Fiddown, Co. Kilkenny". Archiseek - Irish Architecture. 2 October 2013. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  4. ^ "Back to Bessborough". The Irish Aesthete. 2 December 2013. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  5. ^ "Bessborough and Woodstock". www.askaboutireland.ie. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  6. ^ "History Kildalton". www.teagasc.ie.