

After Monday’s tale of Riverstown, County Cork, here are the scant remains of another, slightly earlier property built by another member of the same family. In 1710 Dr Peter Browne, former Provost of Trinity College Dublin, was appointed Church of Ireland Bishop of the United Dioceses of Cork and Ross. Ten years later, he acquired some 118 acres of land to the immediate south-east of the city, with the intention of constructing there ‘a good, substantial and convenient dwelling house and a chapel thereunto adjoining together with suitable offices.’ Named Bishopstown and finished in 1726 at a cost of more than £2,000, he created this property and surrounding demesne to serve as “a fit and convenient residence for himself and his successors, the bishops of Cork and Ross”. The adjacent chapel was consecrated in 1730. Alas, his successors failed to appreciate this legacy and already by 1792 the house at Bishopstown was described as being ‘in a state of decay and totally unfit for the residence of the bishop.’ In the early 1830s the place was leased to a farmer and then in 1878 the Ecclesiastical Commissioners sold the land and buildings. It passed through various hands before being bought by Cork Corporation about half a century ago. Many of the buildings were then in a better condition than is now the case (and some of them have been demolished over the intervening years). What remains is a former farmhouse incorporating an early 18th century limestone doorcase retrieved from the since-lost mansion, and the skeletal remains of the chapel (see below). In the immediate vicinity, jostling for attention with a children’s playground, are a pair of small, three-arched bridges and fragments of a circular battlemented shell house, thought perhaps to have been built during the episcopacy of Robert Clayton, the bishop here 1735-45. Bishopstown today is a heavily-developed suburb of Cork city.


Robert, many thanks for the history of Bishopstown. As a school boys attending Presentation College we lived in Bishopstown Ave and never knew the history.
Very well spotted- your on the money again robert !
https://www.corkcitylibraries.ie/en/online/read-online/bishopstown_house.pdf
What an excellent piece of work. Thanks for the link.
From the source linked above.
The poet Jonathan Smedley in a poem dated 1730 titled The Ode Maker: a Burlesque
on the Dean of Killala’s Ode to the Right Honourable the Earl of Cadogan had the
following uncomplimentary words to say of Peter Browne:
Or if thou art for meaner work,
Then skim thy thoughts away to Corke,
Describe thy Bishop, learned and wise,
Lab’ring at senseless niceties,
Inventing sins, creating evil,
And making new work for the Devil,
Whereas the crimes already past are
More than flesh and blood can master.
However, that thy wonted Care
Of Mother-church may full appear,
Thy Bishop at his See disgrace,
And drink The Memory to his face.
Tell him, that cure of souls, of late,
Is deem’d unbred for priests of state,
That no roof, or sacred wall,
Adorns thy Parish, none e’er shall,
And, if thy wish were truly known,
’Tis That Killala Church were down