Located in the north-west corner of County Westmeath, this is Wilson’s Hospital, a secondary school which in 2011 celebrated its 250th anniversary. The school’s founder was one Andrew Wilson who, the year before his death in 1725, made a will stipulating that if there were no direct male heirs to his estate, then this should be transferred to the Church of Ireland for the establishment of a hospital for elderly Protestant men and a school for impoverished Protestant boys. After a few decades had passed and no male heir had appeared (and a family dispute over the will resolved), work began on the building, its design sometimes attributed to the little-known Dublin architect Henry Pentland. From the front Wilson’s Hospital looks like a Palladian country house, since to the rear of the main block (shown here) are quadrants leading to two-storey wings. And the façade features a two-storey-over-basement limestone breakfront, the three centre bays stepped forward and with fine Venetian windows on the extreme first-floor windows. The institutional nature of the place is indicated by the clock tower visible above the roofline, and, immediately behind the front, by an arcaded, three-storey courtyard that recalls that of the earlier Royal Hospital, Kilmainham, albeit on a smaller scale. Elderly Protestant men are no longer accommodated here, but boys (and for the past 50 years, also girls) continue to be educated at Wilson’s Hospital.
Was this a private home first, and if so, do you know what it was called? Was Andrew Wilson related to the Wilsons of Daramona, do you think?
No, it was built for this specific purpose, not converted from a private house. I’m afraid that I don’t know whether Andrew Wilson was related to the Wilsons of Daramona, but my instinct is that if so, it was only very tangentially: the reason he founded the hospital was because he had no direct heirs…
The front elevation looks very good a lot better than many country houses. The yard and the rainwater goods look like they good benefit from some attention.
My grandfather attended this school and I visited it once with my father when I was a boy. I have my grandfather’s old school tie.