Airfield Estate Explained

Airfield Estate
Map Name:Dublin
State:Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown
Country:Ireland
Established: (Airfield House built)
1894 (Overend family arrive, establish dairy herd)
1974 (Airfield Trust)
Owner:Dromartin Estates Company and Airfield Trust
Produce:milk, vegetables, meat

Airfield Estate is a agritourism site in Dublin, Ireland. Describing itself as "Dublin's only urban working farm and gardens," it incorporates Airfield House, an Anglo-Irish big house,[1] and welcomes visitors to learn about farming and the site's history. As of 2016, it had 75 employees and 280,000 annual visitors.[2]

History

The estate is located in the townland of Drummartin ("Martin's ridge.").[3] The house was built in circa 1830 by Thomas Mackey Scully,[4] of a wealthy Anglo-Irish family from Naas, and named Bess Mount; in 1836 it became Airfield. Scully was a barrister and supported Daniel O'Connell and Repeal.[5] Around 1830 he had married Elizabeth Walsh, a merchant's daughter from Summerhill, Dublin.[6]

The Scullys were one of many landowning families who lost financially in the Great Famine (1845–50); in 1852 Airfield was in the hands of the Encumbered Estates' Court, who sold it to the printer Thomas Cranfield.[7] In 1862 he sold it to the artist Francis Reynolds, who sold it to the Jury family of hoteliers in 1864.[8] [9]

In 1894 the house was sold to the Overend family; Trevor Overend was from a County Down grain-dealing family, but he became a solicitor and moved to Airfield with his wife Lily. They had three daughters: Letitia (1880–1977),[10] Constance (who died in infancy) and Naomi (1900–1993).[11] [12] Letitia and Naomi were noted for their philanthropic work with the Children's Sunshine Home, St John Ambulance, DSPCA and National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children; breeding of Jersey cattle; their world travelling; and their fondness for classic cars. When Trevor died in 1919 he, unusually for the time, left almost all his money to the women of the house, allowing them financial independence. The two daughters never married and were often regarded as eccentrics, driving their pre-war cars and refusing to sell their land for development, instead maintaining a Victorian-era farm in the midst of a suburbanising region.[13] [14] [15]

In 1974 the Overend family left Airfield in trust for the Irish people.[16] [17]

In 2012, shortly after Apple Maps launched, the area was mistaken for being an airport simply titled "Airfield".[18] [19]

Description

Farm and Garden

The farm raises animals including Jersey cattle; Jacob sheep; Oxford Sandy and Black pigs; Saanen goats; Rhode Island Red chickens; and donkeys.[20] The farm also practises organic farming and soil regeneration.[21]

From 2013 Kitty Scully and Colm O’Driscoll led the food and ornamental gardens. With Colm taking over head gardener of the estate from 2017-2022, he has led the eight acres of biodiverse, organically managed gardens. Continually evolving, they make the most of the temperate local climate. The ornamental gardens include a walled garden with generous borders and decorative pergola, as well as tropical borders, a shade garden, glasshouses and pollinator-friendly plantings. In the three-acre organic food garden there is always a bounty of seasonal crops to explore.[22] The three cars driven by the Overend women are preserved:

Airfield House

The house was refurbished in 2014.[25] Its original entrance piers,railings and gates, as well as the house itself, a three-bay, two-storey Victorian structure, are protected structures.[26]

Cultural references

Airfield is mentioned in the 2021 Ross O'Carroll-Kelly novel, Normal Sheeple.[27]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Heritage.
  2. Web site: Cute Chicken = Meat: Irish Farm Teaches Reality to Urbanites. https://web.archive.org/web/20220601203522/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/irish-farm. dead. 1 June 2022. September 5, 2016. Culture.
  3. Web site: Droim Máirtín/Drummartin. logainm.ie.
  4. Web site: Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland. June 1, 1847. Pettigrew & Oulton.. Google Books.
  5. Web site: Slater's National Commercial Directory of Ireland; Including in Addition to the Trades' Lists, Alphebetical Directories of Dublin, Belfast, Cork and Limerick. To which are Added Classified Directories of the Important English Towns of Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham, West Bromwich, Leeds, Sheffield and Bristol, and in Scotland, Those of Glasgow and Paisley. Isaac. Slater. June 1, 1846. I. Slater. Google Books.
  6. Web site: Scully of Airfield. YouWho?.
  7. Web site: Collections Online | British Museum. www.britishmuseum.org.
  8. Web site: Jury of Airfield. YouWho?.
  9. Web site: Airfield. YouWho?.
  10. Book: Walsh, Fionnuala. Irish Women and the Great War. July 16, 2020. Cambridge University Press. 9781108871679 . Google Books.
  11. Book: McNally, Frank. 111 Places in Dublin that you must not miss. June 1, 2016. Emons Verlag. 9783960410263 . Google Books.
  12. Web site: Lives Less Ordinary - the Women of Airfield. Maynooth University.
  13. Book: Lonely Planet Best of Ireland. Lonely. Planet. Neil. Wilson. Fionn. Davenport. Damian. Harper. Catherine Le. Nevez. Isabel. Albiston. May 1, 2018. Lonely Planet. 9781787018952 . Google Books.
  14. Web site: Letitia and Naomi. Special. Collections. MU Library Treasures.
  15. Book: Lennox-Boyd, Arabella. Gardens in My Life. April 15, 2021. Head of Zeus Ltd. 9781789545692 . Google Books.
  16. Book: Ingle, Ann. Openhearted: Eighty Years of Love, Loss, Laughter and Letting Go. September 23, 2021. Penguin UK. 9781844885725 . Google Books.
  17. Web site: Women's Museum of Ireland | Articles | The Overend Women. womensmuseumofireland.ie.
  18. News: 2012-09-21 . Apple map glitch relocates Dublin Airport to farm . en-GB . BBC News . 2022-11-10.
  19. Web site: Apple's new iOS6 mapping feature misnames Airfield city farm in Dublin an air strip/airport — City Farmer News . 2022-11-10 . cityfarmer.info.
  20. Web site: Beautiful Airfield | An Urban Farm in Dundrum Dublin. www.fun.ie.
  21. Web site: On The Farm.
  22. Web site: Airfield Ornamental Gardens. Dublin Garden Trail.
  23. News: Women were a driving force. The Irish Times.
  24. Web site: Airfield. The IVVCC Journal. Jim. O'Sullivan. Spring 2014.
  25. Web site: Historic Airfield House Reopens Following €11m Revamp. External Works Index.
  26. Web site: Historic Airfield House Reopens Following €11m Revamp. GCON.
  27. Book: O'Carroll-Kelly, Ross. Normal Sheeple. August 19, 2021. Penguin Books Limited. 9781844885510 . Google Books.