2023:047 - Lehaunstown House, Dublin

NMI Burial Excavation Records

County: Dublin Site name: Lehaunstown House

Sites and Monuments Record No.: DU026-093 Licence number: 22E0584

Author: Siobhán Deery

Site type: 16th-century tower house & later enclosed farmyard

Period/Dating: Late Medieval (AD 1100-AD 1599)

ITM: E 723028m, N 723137m

Latitude, Longitude (decimal degrees): 53.244334, -6.156672

Archaeological testing was carried out at Lehaunstown Park House, Cherrywood, Dublin 18. The site structures include a two-storey T-shaped farmhouse, which was built on and around a 16th-century Tower House (RMP DU026-093), a two-storey L-shaped stables/coach house, farm-yard walls, stone boundary walls, entrance gates, pillars, and ruins. The lands include the farm gardens, access, stable yard, working yard, protected trees, and fields enclosed by a high wall.
Ten test trenches totalling 230m were opened across the site. An extensive cobbled stone surface occupied the area directly in front of the stables. The cobble surface, which measures c. 25m (north-east/south-west) by 40m (east-west), was previously exposed and recorded during archaeological monitoring (McIlreavy and Tobin, 2016, licence ref: 15E0470). The surface is in overall good repair with some damaged or sunken sections visible. The cobbles ran parallel to and conformed with the layout of the buildings shown on the 1909 OS Mapping and are therefore likely to be 19th century in date associated with the construction of the stable block.
A small area of metalling was exposed to the rear of the stable block building. The metalling, which was overlain by a layer of crushed granite, slate and compact mortar, was thought to be construction material associated with the 19th-century stable block. Given the depth of the surface and its difference in composition to that at the front of the stables, it is possible that the stone surface may be associated with the 18th-century farm yard or the earlier 16th-century tower house. The area to the north of the stable block and to the east of the site appears to have been scarped and in places sealed by a 19th-century construction layer of very compact crushed granite.
No additional finds, features or deposits of archaeological interest were identified during this phase of testing.

Lynwood House, Ballinteer Road, Dublin 16