Butler House, Kilkenny Explained

Building Type:Dower house
Location Town:-->
Location Country:Ireland
Completion Date:1798
Destruction Date:-->
Management:or
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Butler House is an 18th-century Georgian Dower house located in Kilkenny, Ireland. It is currently being used as a 4-star hotel and conference centre.

History

Butler House was built so that it was completed by 1786 as the Dower house for Kilkenny Castle. It was built for the 16th Earl of Ormonde for his wife to live in when their son, the future 17th Earl of Ormonde, inherited the title.[1] [2] [3] The first occupant was Lady Eleanor Butler, though it isn't certain if she and her husband moved in before his death.[4] Her daughter Eleanor was one of the Ladies of Llangollen.[5]

The 1st Marquess of Ormonde (who was also the 19th Earl of Ormonde) lived in the house while he was doing significant reconstruction work on the Castle in 1831. A local cholera epidemic in 1832 meant that the family used the house as the site of a soup kitchen. The house was substantially extended about this time as well.[6] [7]

The Royal Historical and Archaeological Association of Ireland, now the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland (RSAI), was formed in the house in the 1870s.[8] [9]

The house was refurbished in the 1970s by the Kilkenny Design Workshops which had taken over the Castle yard and house in 1965. In 1989 the house was opened as a hotel and conference centre and is owned and managed by the Kilkenny Civic Trust. The gardens were restored to their previous glory in 2000.[6]

Architecture

It is a classic Georgian three-bay three-storey over basement house with a pair of three full-height bowed bays to the east side of the house facing into the walled garden which backs onto the Castle Yard and stables to Kilkenny Castle. The hotel retained many of the historic characteristics including the well-preserved rooms.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jane Fenlon. The Ormonde picture collection. September 2001. Dúchas/Heritage Service. 978-0-946846-38-2.
  2. Book: Katherine M. Lanigan. Gerald Tyler. Margery Brady. Kilkenny: its architecture & history. 1987. Appletree Press. 978-0-86281-180-8.
  3. Web site: Butler House, 16 Patrick Street Lower, Kilkenny, County Kilkenny. National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.
  4. Book: Paddy Friel. Kilkenny Castle. 1 January 1989. National Parks and Monuments Service, Office of Public Works. 978-0-946617-08-1.
  5. Web site: Ladies of Llangollen paved the way for lesbian couples . independent . 26 January 2021 . en.
  6. Web site: History of Butler House.
  7. Book: Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Parliamentary Papers. 1836. H.M. Stationery Office. 1–.
  8. Book: Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 1873. 339–.
  9. Book: The Journal of the Royal Historical and Archaeological Association of Ireland. 1889. The Association.