The townland of Castlehyde, which is c. 32 hectares (79 acres) in area,[4] is in the civil parish of Fermoy and the historical barony of Condons and Clangibbon.[1] It is bordered by Castlehyde East (198 hectares (490 acres)), in which Castlehyde House is located, and Castlehyde West (17 hectares (42 acres)).[5][6]
History
Initially associated with the Norman Condon family, a four-storey tower house on the site is dated by some sources to the 13th century.[7] Also known as Carriganeide, Carrygnedye or Temple Iogan, this tower house was in use until at least the 16th century.[8][9] Following the Desmond Rebellions in the late 16th century, the castle and its lands were seized by the English Crown from the then Earl of Desmond, and granted to Arthur Hyde.[10][11] The estate subsequently became known as Castle Hyde,[9] and was occupied by the Hyde family for several hundred years.[10]
A later manor house was constructed for the Hyde family, close to the site of the earlier tower house. These initial works were completed, c. 1790, by architect Davis Ducart.[12] Additional expansion works were completed by Abraham Hargrave, a Cork-based builder and architect, c. 1800.[12][13]
A Gothic revival church, built in 1809 by G.R. Pain for John Hyde, is located to the north of the house.[14]
At the time of the sale in 1851, Castlehyde House was occupied by Spencer Cosby Price, the brother-in-law of John Hyde.[16] The house passed through several owners, including members of the Wrixon-Becher family,[10] and by the 1940s the building was reputedly "occupied by the military".[16]
The house, which is a protected structure, was purchased and renovated in 1999 by Michael Flatley.[3] As of mid-2020, Flatley was reputedly seeking to sell the property,[2] but subsequently decided against the sale stating that he was "too emotionally attached to Castlehyde".[17]
Further reading
Dooley, Terence A. M. (2017). Castle Hyde: The Fall and Rise of an Irish Country House. Maynooth Studies in Irish Local History. Four Courts Press. ISBN9781846826436.
^ abGrove-White, James (1905–1925), Historical and Topographical Notes, Etc. on Buttevant: Castletownroche, Doneraile, Mallow, and Places in Their Vicinity, vol. 2, Cork: Guy and Company, p. 88-89
^ abcO'Flanagan, J. Roderick (1895). "Recollections of Castle Hyde"(PDF). Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society. 2. 1 (5): 200–207.
^Crofton Croker, Thomas (1824). "The River Blackwater". Researches in the South of Ireland. London: John Murray. p. 129. About a mile and half distant [from Fermoy] is Castle Hyde, the seat of Mr. Hyde, to whose ancestor, a grant of six thousand acres of the Earl of Desmond's forfeited ground was made by Elizabeth, as a record for his military services in England