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Irish Times,
1 December 2005
City Living
History housed in your home
Does your house have a past? Many people and companies are
now commissioning house histories to find out. Edel Morgan
reports
If you own an old house - or are about to buy one - you may
be curious about its past. While you're up to your elbows
in dirty washing, have you ever wondered if its 18th or 19th
century owners had maids to do it for them in the scullery.
Or if refined ladies sat in crinolines in your front parlour?
Could your home have been the backdrop to a society scandal
or a meeting place for poets and scholars?
One way to satisfy your curiosity is to commission a detailed
house history. Research consultancy Eneclánn will uncover
its past at a cost of €450 to over €1,000, depending
on how steeped in history it turns out to be. One of Eneclánn's
more salacious recent discoveries when investigating a 19th
century house in Killiney was that its first owner, a financier,
scandalised society when he absconded to South Africa after
squandering £117,000 of his clients' money - about €20
million today. He was subsequently arrested and deported back
to Ireland. It later emerged that he had spent most of the
money doing up his house.
To get to the bottom of a property's past, Eneclánn
consults street directories, census returns, legal documents
and architectural records.
The service is used by a variety of people, including architects,
estate agents, developers and families wanting to find out
more about the origins of their house. It is also becoming
popular as a quirky wedding or anniversary gift.
Because the histories take around eight-10 weeks to compile,
Cathy McCartney, Eneclánn's marketing manager, says
a more suitable gift for Christmas would probably be a framed
19th century ordinance survey map showing the recipient's
house, priced from €130.
Estate agents like Sherry FitzGerald and Douglas Newman Good
use the service in the hope it will throw up juicy facts that
they can use in the marketing of large period houses. People
also do it to probe into a "belief about a house",
says McCartney. "It could be that that someone famous
is thought to have lived there. We did a house which the owner,
a charity, wanted to redevelop, but it was thought to have
been the birthplace of an 18th century playwright and MP.
It turned out that the real birthplace was a few doors away
and the street had been renumbered. The development was allowed."
The houses Eneclánn take on tend to be pre-1900, "the
bigger and older the more likely there are to be interesting
stories attached". They also tend to be over 186sq m
(2,000sq ft).
Smaller period or artisan homes can be less successful. "Some
of them were built for the working classes and poorer people
left less of a paper trail, like wills and deeds. In those
cases, you may be able to discover who lived there but not
much more."
A house history can give a fascinating insight into social
change, says McCartney. Henrietta Street in Dublin 1, for
example, was one of the grandest in Dublin but the demise
of the Irish Parliament through the Act of Union in 1800 saw
them turn into tenements by the late 19th century.
The 19th century property market had its bubbles and slumps,
just as subsequent centuries. The thriving rental market of
the 19th century meant that homes changed hands often. As
now, people built houses on spare land and rented them to
supplement a pension.
While nowadays people put their children through college on
the proceeds, then it could have been to fund a dowry or support
a spinster daughter. Period houses can also be living museums.
"Some of the larger country mansions in particular feature
rare surviving work by local craftsmen ."
END
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