Tuesday 4 September 2007

Mourning a Manor


First, I would like to welcome Rachel home after completing her Mission to Ireland succesfully. You will hear from her of her magnificent adventures there shortly. I also would like to thank our dearest Librarian Linda for finding this 2005 Times Online article for us. It's about the decision behind selling Carrigglas Manor to a hotel developer. I admit that I was very sad to learn that Carrigglas was turned into a hotel, but I understand that it's never easy to manage such a large manor (40 rooms!) in this century. Hence, here's a tribute to Jeffry and Tessa Lefroy who had taken care of Carrigglas for almost 30 years.

Ireland: Mourning a Manor

After years of struggling to maintain their family seat, Tessa Lefroy describes how she and her husband are bidding it farewell — and they feel bereaved.

The first time I set eyes on Carrigglas Manor was on a dark, wet day in the summer of 1967. In the driving rain, the large castellated edifice loomed up rather like something out of Wuthering Heights.

It was new to me but of course not to my husband, Jeffry, whose family had owned it since 1810. We were there to visit Jeffry’s cousin, Phoebe, as part of a tour of the Irish relations and to show off the new son and heir. Little did we know that she had other ideas. Early in 1972, Phoebe announced that she was moving to something smaller. Carrigglas would be our home for the next 29 years.

The next time we visited, the house had been vacant for a few months. We soon discovered that unless lived in, its deterioration would be alarmingly swift. On our arrival, it felt dank and chilly, with a pervading odour of decay. We must be mad, I thought, coming back home to Ireland where the political climate of the time was as inhospitable as the weather.

The situation in the north seemed to have spread its tentacles throughout the whole of Ireland — traditional loyalties had become polarised and it was imperative to watch one’s tongue. Jeffry, because of his links with the British Army — albeit in an Irish regiment — had been warned not to return to Ireland because his safety could not be guaranteed.

Not wanting to give in to intimidation we visited the house regularly, returning during the summers to do the hay and other farm work.

I moved in permanently in 1976, six months before Jeffry, and was promptly advised by a prominent local citizen to “keep a low profile”. I heeded the advice, which, in hindsight, was a mistake, because it was years before I got to know my neighbours. This was a loss to me because when Jeffry was away on farm or forestry business, life was often lonely — unintentionally I gave the impression of being grand and unapproachable behind my big walls.

Having decided to take our chance and stay on in what remains a lovely, unspoilt part of Ireland, the house became our obsession. We had little money and attacked the renovation with more gusto than sense, but it seemed to respond to our good intentions and soon the results began to emerge. My interior decorating skills were aroused after lying dormant through years of living in army quarters with Jeffry.

It was painstaking. The background of the cornice in the drawing room alone took four months to complete, but although I say it myself, some of the results were magnificent.

In 1985, we opened to the public and a couple of years later began taking in paying guests under the auspices of Hidden Ireland. This was the brainchild of John Colclough, where holidaymakers were welcomed into the great private houses of Ireland and entertained by the owners with dinners and accommodation in huge four-poster beds.

As we became practised, the dinners became more resplendent both in taste and elegance. Soon we were living in a style to which we had never been accustomed. In our heyday, as many as eight coaches arrived per week to be entertained by Jeffry’s unique guided tours of the house followed by lunches in the tearoom and a tour of the gardens. Business appeared to be booming.

It didn’t last. After about 14 years, a period when tourism in Ireland was at a peak, the visitors began to drop away and we woke up to realise that we had never made enough money to keep up with the repairs.

Our labour costs were increasing so we had to dispense with the staff — what had been exhilarating in the beginning became exhausting. We worried constantly. Jeffry was combining farm work, ever-increasing paperwork and his role as “front of the house”, while I looked after the horses, kept the gardens and cooked. The hardest thing was turning up for dinner with guests every evening pretending I had spent the day arranging flowers.

After an emergency family conference, we decided that our job was simply impossible. We reasoned that the only way for the house to survive was to sell it to somebody with the resources to look after it properly. This was a particular blow to Jeffry. As titular head of the Lefroy family worldwide, he felt he was the custodian of the ancestral home. It seemed that 29 years of labour had been to no avail.

The house has such a magnificent history. It was built in 1837 by Thomas Lefroy, an inamorato of Jane Austen and the inspiration for Mr Darcy in Pride and Prejudice. When it was built it was the height of modernity, perhaps the earliest Victorian house in Ireland.

Fortunately, our relations were magnificent when we told them of our plans, praising us for what we had done and for giving so many years of pleasure to so many people.

In the past century, the same fate has befallen hundreds of country estates. Indeed, many of them have met a much worse fate, either being razed to the ground or left to ruin. Thankfully, Carrigglas’ future is secure: it is going to be turned into a country house hotel development with new homes in the grounds. The planning laws are now so strict that the house and yards must be restored to their former glory.

The long, drawn-out process of leaving it can only be compared to that of living out the last days with a terminally ill, dearly loved relation. Our final family gatherings have been like wakes — a mixture of nostalgia and fun punctuated by stabbing moments of grief.

Sorting out the family chattels of 200 years or more is an onerous task. Some will stay with the house but many will come with us. The day-to-day things — old photographs, letters and other intimate objects, the inventory of a family — are the problem. Everything has to be labelled, so we know where it came from and where it belongs. There are 40 rooms to empty, and Jeffry and I can’t agree on anything. We have more than 100 boxes of family archives to be housed where relatives can see them, and we shall need a certain amount of wall space on which to hang family portraits.

We thought we had found a dream house not far away but we were gazumped. What we need is a place we can manage as we get older.

As the dreaded day of departure looms we are homeless — though certainly not bereft of belongings. What shall we do with the horses or the peacocks and ducks, the only stalwarts to escape the fox? We hope we will find the perfect property in Ireland, the land of our birth. If not, we may turn to France, from whence the family came in 1760. I have a recurring nightmare where we are living in a mobile home in the middle of a field, surrounded by 40ft containers filled with our belongings. I hope the strong Huguenot tradition of moving on will see us through.


Pic 1 : Aerial view of Carrigglas Manor from Carrigglas of Longford

Pic 2: Carrigglas Manor, from Carrigglas of Longford

Pic 3: The drawing room of Carrigglas Manor

Pic 4: Jeffry and Tessa Lefroy, from the archives of Carrigglas Manor website

Pic 5: The large complex of hotel and houses in Carrigglas, from Carrigglas of Longford




10 comments:

Michelle said...

Thank you Linda for this discovery!! It's an excellent article. Such a gorgeous building! I love the second photograph. So many memories attached to this place...

The family archives and chattels from the estate must be AMAZING. "The inventory of a family" - I like that. Is there any word on what became of the library collection? I hope the books have been preserved together. (I wish we could know if early editions of a certain author resided there...)

The "family portraits" comment caught my attention. I have only seen the portrait of the young Tom L Lefroy - surely there must be others, at least an 'official portrait' of the Chief Justice later in life?

Tina said...

What a great article! I thought along the same lines as Michelle--maybe there might be some books (or letters!!!) hidden among the old Lefroy possessions...

Icha said...

I know that, Ladies ^_^

Is it not exciting to be able to take a sneak peek into some of Tom's books and letters? Oh... if only we can contact them... (wink to Rachel)

On TL's portraits, so far we have only three: the gorgeous young one in colour, the bald middle age man, and the Chief Justice with the wig. I would not mind more portraits of him when he's in mid 30s...

Anonymous said...

So they're leaving the place? Makes me quite sad.

Kanani said...

Wonderful article. Thanks for being such a dogged fan of Jane Austen.
I can only imagine the expense and sheer hard work of maintaining such a home. Seems the only person who could possibly afford to own and live in something like this is Bill Gates or Oprah!

Icha said...

Awww... thanks Kanani. Yeah, we're hopelessly dogged fans here... can't help it...

And yes, I completely understand the weight of managing such a HUGE estate... hence their decision.

Unknown said...

I grew up here, my granny and grandad lived in the gate lodge and my grandad worked first for phoebe lefroy and then for the major. It was a truly beautiful magical place and breaks my heart to see what has happened to it since its sale

Unknown said...

A shame she made no mention of the staff who lived on the grounds and lived carrigglass just as much as its owners over 20 years of my life were spent there and to see the decay it had fallen into is utterly heartbreaking

Crea Nolan said...

I have just seen this article on Carrigglas Manor from 2005 - I worked as a Tour Guide for nearly 10 years,ran the gift shop,helped out in the tea rooom etc - I loved every minute of my time there and made some good friends. I loved the house and its connection with one of my most favourite authors - Jane Austen. I cried when I saw the video taken of the inside of the Manor House, totally derelict and in ruin. These grand houses are part of the Irish Heritage, whether people like it or not, and this house should have been protected.

However, I am extremely disappointed and sad that Tessa Lefroy made no mention of the staff that worked in the tea rooms and main house - all of us worked very hard to make the place welcoming to the many tourists that visited the house over the years - in fact, without the staff, the house would not have been able to open as a tourist destination. An acknowledgement of this work and dedication should have been acknowledged.

Unknown said...

Crea Nolan I completely agree, you must have known my grandparents then, mr and Mrs Quinn who lived in tthe farm gate house for over 49 years and both worked there , I was very disappointed that the staff were not mentioned