Baltyboys House Explained

Baltyboys House, also known as Boystown House, is an 18th-century Georgian country house in Blessington, County Wicklow, Ireland.

Baltyboys House is a mansion built in the Georgian style. The estate sits on one hundred acres in Blessington, County Wicklow.[1] [2] It is located a mile from Russborough House, near Poulaphouca Reservoir.[3]

The estate was previously owned by the Smiths, a gentry family. Elizabeth Grant Smith, the wife of Colonel Henry Smith, wrote extensively about managing the estate, particularly during the Great Famine.[4] Dame Ninette de Valois, the great-granddaughter of Elizabeth Grant Smith, was born at Baltyboys.[5] [6] In her 1959 memoir Come Dance With Me, de Valois described Baltyboys House thus:

My home, Baltiboys, a country house situated some two miles from the village of Blessington in County Wicklow, stood in the middle of a beautiful stretch of country at the foot of the Wicklow Hills. The original house was burnt in the rising of 1798; the house was now a long two-storeyed building with a spacious network of basement rooms. It was a typical Irish country house of about 1820-30, late Georgian in part, consisting of one main wing and two smaller ones.

In January 2014 the estate sold for €4.925 million by the owner, Elizabeth McClory, daughter of Vincent O'Brien and second wife of Kevin McClory. Baltyboys was not listed on the market, instead being sold through a private auction at Christie's.[7]

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Baltyboys House. National Inventory of Architectural Heritage. 3 March 2019.
  2. Book: Long, George. The Penny Cyclopædia. Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. 1843. 27. 356.
  3. Book: Hayes, Jim. The Road from Harbour Hill. iUniverse LLC. February 2014. Bloomington, Indiana. 229. 9781491716236.
  4. Web site: Personal narratives as historical sources: the journal of Elizabeth Smith 1840-1850 (3:1). TeBrake. Janet K.. History Island. History Publications Ltd. 3 March 2019.
  5. Web site: Baltyboys House, Hill and Cairn. Wicklow Heritage. 3 March 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190306045041/https://wicklowheritage.omeka.net/items/show/16. 6 March 2019. dead.
  6. Web site: Blessington Lakeside. 24 February 2018. Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. 3 March 2019.
  7. Web site: Owning the big house: Who buys a country pile?. Lyons. Madeleine. 15 May 2014. The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. 3 March 2019.