Country house, Ballinluig, Co. Cork
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A stone plaque set into the front wall of this two-storey house in Ballinluig, County Cork, records that John Roche Fitzpatrick and his wife Clara built it in 1687.
The plaque was originally fixed to a garden wall, where it sat for the better part of three centuries before being relocated to the house facade around 1973. That modest transfer of stone from one wall to another is, in its quiet way, the most interesting thing here: someone thought it worth preserving, and so a seventeenth-century inscription now announces itself from a building that looks, in most respects, like a product of the nineteenth.
The apparent contradiction between the 1687 date and the house's current appearance is not unusual in rural Irish domestic architecture. What stands today is a two-storey structure with a three-bay entrance front facing south-east, a central round-headed doorway framed by a plaster surround, tripartite windows at ground level, and a gabled roof with end chimneys. These are the proportions and details of the Georgian and post-Georgian vernacular tradition, suggesting that whatever Fitzpatrick and his wife originally built was substantially remodelled or rebuilt in the nineteenth century, with additions made to the rear at some later point. The plaque, then, may be the only surviving material link to the original structure. John Roche Fitzpatrick presumably belonged to one of the Old English Catholic families who bore the Roche and Fitzpatrick surnames across Munster, though no further detail about him or his household accompanies the inscription.