The Folks Who Live at Rush Hill

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The Irish term ‘strong farmer’ refers not to the title holder’s physical strength but to the size of his land holding. Until sequential legislation in the late 19th/early 20th centuries collectively known as the Land Acts, the greater part of this country lay in the possession of a relatively small number of wealthy families, their tenants obliged to survive on tiny holdings of just a couple of acres. Tenantry leasing larger, more economically viable plots of land came to be known as strong farmers and their fiscal strength allowed them to build bigger houses than the usual one- or two-roomed thatched cottage.
Rush Hill in County Roscommon is just such a house. This has never been a particularly fashionable, or indeed affluent, part of the country but it used to sustain many more such properties; of the four ‘gentlemen’s seats’ identified in the immediate parish by Samuel Lewis in his 1837 Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, Rush Hill is the only one still standing. The core of the house dates from c.1700. By that date, and for the next 200-odd years, much of the region was owned by the King family, beneficiaries of extensive land acquisitions made in the first decades of the 17th century by an ancestor, Edward King, Anglican Bishop of Elphin.

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Rush Hill’s clerical connections are frequent. Within a century of Bishop King taking possession of the land on which the house stands, it was leased together with some 400 acres to a relation of his descendants, the Rev. George Blackburne who became rector of the local parish and built a new church at the end of what was effectively Rush Hill’s drive. Described by Lewis as ‘a neat, plain building with a small spire,’ this survived an ever-dwindling congregation until demolished in 1971. The graveyard survives.
Unmarried, Blackburne left control of the property to his nephew William Devenish; generations of the same family remained there as major tenant farmers and minor Protestant gentry for the next 150 years. In 1884 the last of the line to live at Rush Hill, Robert Devenish gave up the tenancy and two years later it was let to George Acheson whose heirs continued to live there until 1943, during which time they acquired the freehold of the house and 109 acres from the King estate. Next it passed into the hands of a local farmer but after fifty years the house was abandoned and began to slide into decay, a condition only partially arrested when a Dutch family bought the place in 1997. Ten years ago Rush Hill was acquired by its present owners who ever since have been engaged in diligently restoring house and grounds.

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By the time they assumed responsibility for the place, Rush Hill was in poor shape; it had not been rewired since the mid-1950s when electricity was first introduced to the premises, the only sink was in the kitchen, supplied with water via a rubber hose through a window, and the only lavatory was broken. Almost all the windows needed to be replaced, as did many floorboards and parts of the roof, while the majority of original fittings like chimney pieces had long since been sold or stolen. Likewise outdoors the gardens were overgrown and the yard buildings in a state of total dereliction.
Given the scale of work required, inevitably it has taken time to achieve the present results. Looking at Rush Hill today, it is hard to imagine the property’s shambolic state a mere ten years ago. While most of the finance for this enterprise has come from the owners’ own resources, they did receive assistance on a couple of occasions from the Heritage Council; one worries the organisation may not be able to provide such support for much longer, given the present government’s apparent determination to emasculate it.

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Rush Hill is precisely the kind of property that deserves help from state agencies, especially when relatively small sums can make a substantial difference. Too often, because the national mindset is fixed on the extremes of Big House and peasant cottage, the idea that our architectural heritage might include other kinds of domestic building tends to be overlooked. Not being one of the region’s more significant properties, Rush Hill could easily have slipped out of existence, like the other three ‘gentlemen’s seats’ in the parish, had it not been rescued just in time. The evolution of Rush Hill took place over three centuries; the core five-bay house probably began as just one-room deep and without the lop-sided extensions to either side of the central block or indeed the latter’s projecting groundfloor bows. Gradually the house grew to reflect successive owners’ affluence and aspirations until achieving its present form. In the process, it came to represent one lesser-known but still important strand of our nation’s history. Without Rush Hill’s patient preservation we should all be the poorer.

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24 comments on “The Folks Who Live at Rush Hill

  1. Siobhan Walsh says:

    Delightful and inspiring article on Rush Hill. It’s rediscovered glory in these photos is a credit to its current owners!

  2. Karel Jongkind says:

    I am very honored that I have been part off it by doing some work in it and I am more honored by knowing the owners and learned from them the appreciation for there house

    • Peter King says:

      This used to be part of my family from my fathers side, I am a direct desendant of Sir Gilbert King the 3rd Baron and the funny thing is the next heir apparent to the Baronetcy was born in 1988 and will become the 9th Baron and his name is Peter Richard Donald King (born 1988).

      • Faye says:

        I am a descendent of the Devenish family, my great grandmother was Anne Devenish 1836 – 1920, father John devenish
        Very proud to find these articles and see the amazing restoration that has been done. I live in New Zealand

  3. Frances Rouse says:

    I am researching my Devenish ancestors and was delighted to follow the restoration of Rush Hill and to see the interiors at last – the owners have restored it beautifully, epecially when one remembers its original sad state. I would like to contact them if possible.

    • If you wish, I can forward your email address to the owners and ask them to contact you. Please let me know if this would suit.

    • Vincent P. Delany says:

      Frances Rouse
      I am also researching the Devenish family- particularly Robert the last resident of Rush Hill. i have a lot of information to date.
      Contact me at delanyvincent@gmail.com

    • Vincent Delany says:

      I am just completing a book on the North Shannon Yacht Club of which Robert Devenish was Hon Sec for about 25 years. If you want copy of the book for c.€16 contact me.

    • Faye says:

      Frances, I would love to see if/how we are related. I live in NZ, great grandmother was Anne Devenish, 1836 -1920 daughter of John & Elizabeth Jane Bessie Devenish (nee Nixon)

      • Vincent says:

        If you want to know about the Devenish family, you should read:
        Harman Murtagh, Athlone history and settlement to 1800 (Athlone, 2000). It is available from the Old Athlone Society. If you can’t get a copy from them- let me know.

      • Faye Alexander says:

        I’ll look it up, may be a little difficult as I live in NZ

      • Frances Rouse says:

        Hullo Faye and Peter King,
        This is great to have another Devenish contact. Yes, I can vouch for the wonderful restoration of Rush Hill.
        I have searched my files and found another Nixon marriage – Elizabeth (daughter of Andrew of Cavan) married Rev. Charles Meares, as his 2nd wife in 1774. Is this the same family? Other close families are Lennon, Gouldsbury and Meares – Athlone, Roscommon, Mullingar areas.
        If you would like to email further, I’m sure our excellent moderator can arrange it.
        Looking forward to further contact,
        Frances

  4. Happy to have been of help, and hope you continue to enjoy The Irish Aesthete…

  5. Diane Farr says:

    I have recently learned of my own connection to Rush Hill through Sarah Devenish, who married Thomas Morton in 1837 (first cousin 4X removed), so I was thrilled to come across this blog entry. I’ve been following The Irish Aesthete for a while and cheering you on from California. Thank you for documenting all these fascinating properties.

  6. Ann Whitney Devenish says:

    I am hoping to briefly visit Rush Hill on a visit to Ireland in October 2019. Robert Jones Devenish was my great grandfather; his oldest son being George Bushe Devenish, and his oldest son, Robert Whitney Devenish being my father. I don’t wish to intrude on the current owners but wish to view the house’s exterior. Could you contact me at my email?

  7. Elly van Oudenaren says:

    Hello, I once visited the house because my brother-in-law, Willem van Oudenaren, owned the house. It was in a very poor condition and when you were on the loo you could see the downstairs. It did hurt us to see the house in this condition and I’m glad it has been beautifully restored.

  8. I am researching my Devenish ancestors and was delighted to come across this information
    hello to my devenish ancestors alike from london uk my grate grandfather was Joseph Harrison Devenish

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