Manresa House, Dublin Explained

Manresa House
Other Name:Baymount Castle
Pushpin Map:Ireland
Pushpin Mapsize:192
Map Caption:Location in Ireland
Coordinates:53.3668°N -6.1783°W
Location:Dollymount, Clontarf
Country:Republic of Ireland
Denomination:Roman Catholic
Website:Manresa.ie
Former Name:Granby Hall
Baymount Castle
Status:Active
Functional Status:Retreat centre
Heritage Designation:Protected Structure[1]
Deanery:Fingal South East[2]
Archdiocese:Dublin
Province:Dublin
Logosize:221

Manresa House is a retreat centre run by the Society of Jesus in the Dollymount area of Clontarf in Dublin, near Saint Anne's Park. In the 19th century it was home to Robert Warren and Arthur Guinness, and it is a protected structure.[1] [3]

History

Origins

Manresa House is a large house originally constructed in the mid 18th century. It was originally known as Granby Hall, and then Baymount Castle and included 17 acres of land surrounding the house.[4]

From 1775–83, it was a residence of the Bishop of Down and Connor, James Traill.

In 1838, it was leased from J.E.V. Vernon by Robert Warren who largely remodelled the house in a gothic revival castellated style, possibly by the architect George Papworth.[5] [6] New outbuildings and gate lodges were also constructed at this time.

In 1845 it became the property of the Sisters of Loreto who opened a school. In 1851, it was renovated by the sisters, because the building was damaged by a serious fire that year and they ultimately moved to Balbriggan in the years following.[3] [7]

In the later 19th century the house was owned by George Tickell, a property developer.

In 1898, it was sold to Arthur Guinness, 1st Baron Ardilaun.

Use as a Preparatory School

In around 1904 William Scott opened a school on the premises called Baymount Preparatory School, of which he was headmaster until 1936. The school was then acquired by John Tudor Gwynn, who ran it until 1948. John T Gwynn was a descendant of John Gwynn and a member of the Gwynn family that included noted literary figures such as Stephen Gwynn and Edward Gwynn.[3]

Establishment of Spirituality Centre

In 1948, the Archbishop of Dublin, John Charles McQuaid asked the Jesuits to establish a spirituality centre in the Dollymount area, so they bought Baymount Castle. They renamed it Manresa House after Manresa in Catalonia, Spain, where St Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits had many spiritual experiences that contributed to formulation of his Spiritual Exercises.[8]

The Retreat Centre

The first retreat was held there in 1949. In 1966, a new building designed by Andrew Devane was added to accommodate more retreatants and was opened in 1967. Building and renovation work was undertaken in 2022 to provide a new dining and reception area, to renovate accommodation and to refurbish the castle structure.[9]

Irish Jesuit Novitiate 1969–1991

The Irish Jesuit Novitiate was moved from Emo Court in County Laois in 1969 to a building in the grounds of Manresa House. In 1977, part of the property near the novitiate, was sold and the Park Lawn estate built. The novitiate moved to Santry in 1991 before the establishment of the joint British-Irish Novitiate in Birmingham, later to also become the novitiate for other Jesuit Provinces.

Jesuit European Tertianship

The European English-speaking Jesuit European Tertianship was located in Manresa from 2006 until 2021. Tertianship is the third period of formation of a Jesuit, before taking final vows with the order.[10] In 2006, renovation and new building was undertaken to provide for the Tertianship, using the site of the old novitiate for the Tertianship of the Jesuits in Europe. To allow for the reorganisation of the retreat ministry, this building rehoused the Jesuit Community when it moved out of the castle in 2023.

Interior

The centre offers a variety of directed retreats, seminars, and various day and evening events, as well as the 30-day retreat, from the Spiritual Exercises.[11]

In the oval meditation room are a set of windows designed by Evie Hone. They were installed in the 1990s.[12] The windows were originally in the former Jesuit school St Stanislaus College, Tullabeg, County Offaly.

Courses

Manresa House, runs a two year Diploma in Spirituality (Spiritual Direction) accredited by St Patrick's College, Maynooth (Pontifical University)),[13] and has been offered in centres in Galway and Larne. Training in supervision for spiritual directors is also offered, and successful complete the course requirements are awarded an Advanced Diploma in Spirituality (Supervision), a Special Purpose Award from, Maynooth.[14] Manresa House Spiritual Direction training programmes are conducted in association with the Together in the Mystery supervisor training programme.[15]

People associated with Manresa House

Sean McCarron was the first superior in 1949, the social reformer Michael Sweetman served as Superior of Manresa from 1959 to 1960. Joseph Dargan, Laurence Murphy, Paddy Carberry were among those who served as masters of novices in Manresa. The rôle of Superior has been occupied variously by Dónal Mulcahy, Kieran Hanley (1989–1993), Paul Andrews, Joe Dargan and Mike Drennan. The current Superior of the Jesuit Community is Willie Reynolds SJ.

See also

References

  1. http://www.dublincitydevelopmentplan.ie/pdf/Record_of_Protected_Structures.pdf Record of Protected Structure
  2. http://www.dublindiocese.ie/guidebook/deanery Deaneries
  3. http://www.manresa.ie/chapel/history History
  4. Web site: Manresa Jesuit Retreat, 426 Clontarf Road, Clontarf, Dublin 3, DUBLIN . Buildings of Ireland . 22 May 2024.
  5. Web site: Dictionary of Irish Architects . www.dia.ie . 22 May 2024.
  6. Web site: Baymount Castle, Mount Prospect Avenue, Dollymount, Dublin 3, DUBLIN . Buildings of Ireland . 22 May 2024.
  7. Tutty . M. J. . Clontarf . Dublin Historical Record . 29 December 2020 . 12–14 . 1966. 21 . 1 . 30104286 .
  8. http://www.jesuit.ie/where-we-work/manresa-spirituality-centre Manresa Spirituality Centre
  9. https://jesuit.ie/news/building-work-at-manresa/ Building work at Manresa
  10. https://jesuits.eu/news/1884-tertianship-2021-22-in-dublin Tertianships 2021-22 in Bikfaya and Dublin
  11. http://www.sj-wanderings.org/dublin/manresa/retreat-house/ Manresa Retreat House
  12. https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20161213010213/http://multitext.ucc.ie/d/Evie_Hone_window_in_the_Jesuit_Manresa_House_in_Dublin Evie Hone window in the Jesuit Manresa House in Dublin
  13. https://seminary.maynoothcollege.ie/affiliated-programmes Affiliated Programmes
  14. http://maynoothcollege.ie/files/images/Chapter-5.pdf Chapter 5 - Certificate and Diploma Programmes Faculty of Theology
  15. https://www.togetherinthemystery.org/ Together in the Mystery

External links