House - vernacular house, Kenmare, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
House
On the eastern side of the road that runs south from Kenmare town, an abandoned one-storey house carries a small piece of local lore that nobody has ever been able to fully confirm or fully dismiss: that the composer Thomas Moore, best known for the Irish Melodies that made him famous across the English-speaking world in the nineteenth century, once stayed within its walls.
The house itself gives nothing away. Its front elevation of five bays is symmetrical and plain, with a central door flanked on each side by two diamond-pane windows, the kind of glazing pattern common to modest vernacular domestic architecture of the period. The hipped roof, which slopes down on all four sides rather than ending in gable walls, has a chimney set slightly off-centre to the right, a small irregularity that gives the building a quietly lopsided quality.
The structure appears on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1846, though it is marked without a name, which suggests it was already a recognised feature of the landscape by that point but perhaps not associated with any particular family or institution significant enough to label. To the rear, the original three-bay elevation is partly obscured by a flat-roofed extension, and two one-storey outhouses occupy the space behind the main building. Whether Moore's visit, if it happened at all, predates or postdates the 1846 survey is not recorded. Moore was alive until 1852 and travelled in Ireland at various points during his life, so the chronology is at least plausible. Local belief of this kind is rarely invented from nothing, but it is also rarely documented, and the connection here remains precisely that: a belief, passed along rather than written down.