- Source: Bellamont House
Bellamont House (sometimes Bellamont Forest) is a Georgian Palladian-style house set amongst 1,000 acres of grounds in Cootehill, County Cavan, Ireland. The house was completed in 1730 for Judge Thomas Coote and likely designed by his nephew, the architect Edward Lovett Pearce.
It is considered to be one of the finest examples of Palladian architecture in Ireland and was originally loosely modelled on Andrea Palladio's Villa La Rotonda in Vicenza, Italy.
The name of the house is a reference to the Earl of Bellomont.
History
The house was constructed for Thomas Coote, whose 3rd wife Anne Lovett Tighe was an aunt of the architect, Edward Lovett Pearce.
It likely passed to his son, Charles Coote (1695–1750) on his death in 1741 and from there to his son Charles Coote, 1st Earl of Bellomont on his death in 1750.
When Richard Coote, 3rd Earl of Bellomont died in 1766, the Bellamont title became extinct however the title of Baron of Collooney passed to his cousin Charles Coote, 1st Earl of Bellomont who managed to revive the earldom and became Earl of Bellomont in 1767. The house passed down through the family in 1800 to an illegitimate son of Charles, by the name of Charles Johnston Coote but the titles became extinct on his death.
In 1810, Charles married Louisa, a daughter of Richard Thomas Dawson, 2nd Baron Cremorne of nearby Dartrey Forest and he lived until 1841 when the house passed to his eldest son, Dawson Richard Coote who died in 1850.
The house was owned and occupied by a minor, Richard Coote at the time of Griffith's Valuation and administered by Colonel Charles George Henry Coote of H.M. Indian Service.
In 1857 and 1859 portions of the estate were offered for sale in the Landed Estates Court.
The house was later sold on by George Coote in 1875.
= Smith family
=Around this time the house was acquired by Edward Smith for a sum of £145,000. Smith had made a fortune from trading coal on the Newry to Liverpool route.
Later Eric Dorman-Smith, grandson of Edward Smith, inherited the property in 1948, on the death of his father, after serving in the British army in both world wars before resigning his Commission in late 1944. Dorman-Smith later changed his name to O'Gowan and became a Republican while allowing the IRA to use the estate during the border campaign in the 1950s. He died in May 1969.
The house remained in the hands of the extended Smith family until sold on to Bryan Mills in 1981.
= Return to Coote ownership
=The property was acquired by a distant relation of the Coote family, Australian interior designer John Coote (former husband of Australian MP Andrea Coote) who purchased the House in 1987 for £500,000 Irish pounds. Coote restored the property over the following two decades before dying suddenly in 2012 while the property was for sale.
The property was finally sold by a Receiver to an American buyer, John Manuel Morehart in 2015 for €2m with part of the grounds leased to the state-owned forestry company Coillte.
In 2021, Coillte relinquished its leasehold of the forestry element of the estate.
Description
The house is a Palladian style square-plan, four-bay two storey over basement villa set amongst a rolling drumlin landscape. It is faced with red brick with limestone quoins to the ground floor level, and rusticated stone facing to the raised basement level. A protruding Doric entrance portico to the front of the building is also constructed in limestone atop a stone plinth while the broad steps leading up to the villa are sided with ashlar. There are pediments over the ground floor windows with sandstone surrounds and venetian windows to the sides of the property. The property sits on a hill at the highest point in the surrounding area facing mature woodland, pasture, lakes and rivers.
The interior contains marbles busts of various members of the Coote family while the entrance hall is paved with portland stone slabs and contains a coffered elaborate plasterwork ceiling.
The house is approached by a long driveway along Town Lough from the town of Cootehill.
See also
Dartrey Forest