Longford House, Longford Demesne, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
House
What stands in level pasture in County Sligo is not quite a house, not quite a ruin, and not quite what anyone originally planned.
Longford House was built in 1782 as an ambitious Georgian composition intended to anchor two large flanking wings, only one of which was ever completed. Then, sometime in the nineteenth century, fire gutted the main block. Rather than demolish the shell, whoever held the estate at the time replaced the windows, fitted a flat roof, and put the carcass to work as a store. The surviving wing, meanwhile, was remodelled and became the actual dwelling. The result is a building that tells its own story of truncated ambition and practical salvage, standing in open farmland as though waiting for the other wing that never came.
The architectural detail that survived into the record is genuinely varied. The principal front carried a three-sided bow and a pedimented doorcase, both conventions of late eighteenth-century Irish Georgian design. The opposite front was more unusual, featuring a rusticated Venetian loggia at basement level, where rough-cut stonework framed an arched opening in the Italian manner. Somewhere inside, or formerly inside, was a chimney-piece described as Elizabethan or Jacobean in origin, associated with a family named Crofton and removed from Mote, a house in County Roscommon. The grounds added further layers: a lime avenue, which is a formal approach road flanked by lime trees, an old castle, and a ruined oratory. The Crofton chimney-piece travelling from Roscommon to Sligo, the oratory crumbling in the grounds, the castle surviving alongside a house that never reached its intended scale, all suggest a place that accumulated history sideways rather than along any single line.