1870 – Chapel, Loreto Convent, Fermoy, Co. Cork
Architect: G.C. Ashlin Extending an already established convent, Ashlin designed a new wing comprising recreation hall and dormitory, and chapel.
View Article1870 – Annadale House, Belfast, Co. Antrim
Architect: Luke Livingston Macassey “The lithograph illustration given with the present number is of a hose just completed, a short distance fro Belfast,
View Article1870 – An Grianán, Newtown House, Termonfeckin, Co. Louth
Originally built in the 1780s by the McClintock family and called Newtown House. In 1852 it was sold to a Drogheda merchant and shipbuilder called Ralph Smyth who extended it around 1870.
View Article1870 – Belfast Castle, Co. Antrim
Architect: Lanyon, Lynn and Lanyon The Chichesters (later the Donegalls) lived in England as absentee landlords but came to live at Ormeau at the beginning of the nineteenth century.
View Article1870 – Battersea Chapel, London
Architect: E.C. Robins As published in The Building News, March 25th 1870. “WE give this week an illustration of the proposed new chapel for the Baptist congregation formed in 1797,
View Article1870 – Bank of Ireland, Tralee, Co. Kerry
Architect: Sandham Symes Still in use today, although a more recent banking hall has been constructed in front of the original house.
View Article1870 – Bank of Ireland (formerly Goodbody’s), Tullamore, Co. Offaly
A fine three storey warehouse in Ruskinian Gothic, which has been restored and amalgamated into the adjacent Bank of Ireland premises.
View Article1870 – Backhouse & Co., Bank, Sunderland
Architect: G.G. Hoskins Backhouse’s Bank merged in 1896 with Gurney’s Bank of Norwich and Barclays of London to form what is now Barclays Bank.
View Article1870 – Altar of St. Marys, New York, USA
The style of Saint Mary’s, Time Square New York is thirteenth-century French Gothic and is modeled on Sainte-Chapelle in Paris. The church is 180 feet long and 60 feet wide,
View Article1870 – Albert Memorial Clock, Belfast
Architect: William Barre Constructed of sandstone as a memorial to Queen Victoria’s late Prince Consort, Prince Albert, the Albert Memorial Clock stands 113 feet tall.
View Article1870 – 98/99 Fetter Lane, London
Architect: Horace Gundry “This building is one of the earliest examples of the revival of the Jacobean and Queen Anne styles in London,
View Article1870 – St. Andrew’s Church at Toddington Park, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire
Architect: George Edmund Street St. Andrews, the 3rd church to stand on this site in Toddington, was designed by George Edmund Street who had been commissioned by the 3rd Lord Sudeley.
View Article1870 – Cottage Buildings, Walton Manor, Oxfordshire
Architect: Clapton C. Rolfe Elevations & Plans published in The Building News, February 4th 1870. “These cottages are being built on land belonging to S.
View Article1870 – Christ Church, Clapton, London
Architect: James Brooks Destroyed in 1944 as a result of an air raid attack on London. Interior view published in The Building News,
View Article1870 – Bank of Ireland, Boyle, Co. Roscommon
Architect: Millar & Symes Attractive bank branch with symmetrical front elevation, with doors to the banking hall and living accommodation. 1870 – Bank of Ireland, Boyle, Co. Roscommon from...
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