The Red Drawing Room - Castletown House

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The Red Drawing Room Conservation Project at

C ASTLETOWN H OUSE Text by Dorothea Depner

W

hen we speak of Castletown House, Co. Kildare, we tend to seize on its architectural significance as Ireland’s first and largest neo-Palladian country house and focus on the house’s heyday in the eighteenth century to the exclusion of later periods. At the time, it was proclaimed ‘the only house in Ireland to which the term palace may be applied’ and was synonymous with fine style and lavish entertaining that rivalled the viceregal court in Dublin. Built between 1722 and 1729 for William Conolly (1662-1729), Speaker of the Irish House of Commons, Castletown was intended as a political and social centre commensurate with his influence and immense wealth.

Although none of his heirs lived up to his stature, the house flourished when his great-nephew Thomas Conolly (1738-1803) settled there in 1759 with his young wife, Lady Louisa (1743-1821). The daughter of Charles Lennox, 2nd Duke of Richmond, Louisa brought with her the style and refinement she had been accustomed to at her childhood homes in Carton, Goodwood and Richmond House, and set about modernising her new home to suit her tastes. Her influence is still Figure 1: Photograph of the Crimson Drawing Room c. 1880 by Henry Shaw (courtesy of Chris Shaw)

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omnipresent today, be it in the interior decoration she commissioned – the beautiful cantilevered staircase, the exquisite plaster decorations, the stunning Long Gallery or her own carefully curated Print Room, to name but a few – in the parkland she designed stretching towards the river Liffey or in the state-of-the art home farm built to her specifications. After her death, Castletown passed to the son of one of her husband’s nieces, and comparatively little is known about his interventions or life in Castletown for subsequent generations of Conollys until the sale of the house at auction in

1965. Yet even though the family fortunes turned in the nineteenth century and investment into the house was scaled back, the rooms in Castletown today still bear witness to this later layer of history and interior design. None more so, perhaps, than the Red Drawing Room, or, as it was known in the Victorian period, the Crimson Drawing Room, named for its most distinctive feature: the crimson and white silk damask that covered the four walls, most of the seating furniture and that framed the three windows. The photograph taken by Henry


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