Country house, Castlecooke, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Main Houses
Nothing remains of the house at Castlecooke except the absence of it.
Set on a west-facing slope above the steep-sided wooded glen of the Araglin River, the building was burnt in 1921 and subsequently demolished entirely, leaving a gap in the landscape where a substantial country house once stood. What survives instead are the supporting structures: ranges of stone-built farm buildings, and a gatelodge carrying a datestone of 1899, which together trace the outline of a domestic world that no longer has a centre.
The house itself was described as dating from the late seventeenth or early eighteenth century, though by the time it was recorded it had acquired nineteenth-century eaved roofs. Its form was irregular, made up of several gable-ended ranges with a two-storey projecting gabled porch, the kind of accumulative, patched-together silhouette that often results from a building being extended and adapted across generations rather than designed in a single campaign. A photograph taken from the south-west, published by Mark Bence-Jones in 1978, offers the clearest surviving image of what it looked like. The burning of 1921 places it firmly in the pattern of destruction that swept through many Irish country houses during the War of Independence and its aftermath, when dozens of such buildings were targeted or caught in the wider violence of those years. A castle associated with the site stands roughly two hundred metres to the east, suggesting a longer history of occupation on this ground well before the house was built.
The farm buildings that remain, along with the gatelodge, sit close to the original site, with further associated agricultural structures located about one and a half kilometres to the south-east. For anyone moving through this part of north Cork, these survivals are the most legible sign that something larger once existed here.
