BLACKROCK, a chapelry, in the parish of ST. FINBARR,
county of the city of CORK, and province of MUNSTER, 2 1/4miles (E.
S. E.) from Cork: the population is included in the return for the
parish. This place is beautifully situated on a peninsula bounded on
the north and east by the river Lee, and on the south by Lough Mahon
and the Douglas channel. The castle was originally built in 1604 by
the Lord-Deputy Mountjoy, to protect the passage up the river from
the harbour to the city, and was subsequently vested in the
corporation, who held their courts of admiralty in it, and by whom,
having been some years since destroyed by an accidental fire, it was
rebuilt in 1829, from a design by Messrs. Pain, and is now assigned
to the mayor of Cork as an occasional residence during his year of
office. It is situated on a limestone rock projecting into the
river, and consists of one bold circular tower of hewn limestone,
containing a small banqueting room, from which there is a fine view
over the river: from this tower springs a small turret rising to a
considerable elevation and displaying from the upper part of it two
brilliant lights; and attached to it is a water gate, with some low
embattled buildings in the rear, which harmonise well with the
principal feature of the castle. Numerous advantages resulting from
its proximity to Cork; the beauty of its situation, the salubrity of
its climate, and the excellent accommodations for bathing, have
rendered this one of the most desirable places of residence in the
South of Ireland. It has a penny post to Cork, and the railroad from
Cork to Passage will; if carried into effect, pass through the
village. The scenery is of the most varied and pleasing character,
exhibiting numerous elegant villas and cottages, with lawns,
gardens, and plantations reaching down to the margin of the Lee,
which is here a noble expanse of water more than a mile broad,
constantly enlivened by steam-boats and other vessels. Among the
principal seats are Dundanion Castle, that of Sir T. Deane, Knt.;
Beaumont, of W. Beamish, Esq., a noble mansion consisting of a
centre and two wings, with two conservatories, situated in
tastefully arranged grounds; Lakelands, of W. Crawford, Esq.;
Clifton, of J. Moore Travers, Esq.; Ring-Mahon Castle, of J. Murphy,
Esq.; Besborough, of Ebenezer Pike, Esq.; Cleve Hill, of S. Perrott,
Esq.; Castlemahon, of Sir W. A. Chatterton, Bart.; Ferney, of J. H.
Manley, Esq.; Filtrim, of W. Fagan, Esq.; Ashton, of J. Cotter,
Esq.; Prospect, of Garden Terry, Esq.; Rochelle, of R. W. Topp,
Esq.; Carrigduve, of R. Notter, Esq.; Sans Souci, of R. B. Shaw,
Esq.; Carrigduve, of G. Sherlock, Esq.; Chiplee, of P. Maylor, Esq.;
Ballinure House, of W. Crofts, Esq.; Lakeview House, of Miss Allen;
Webbe Ville, of the Rev. C. Tuthill; Mary Ville, of J. Lindsay,
Esq.; Lakeview, of P. Kearney, Esq., Templeville, of M. Murphy,
Esq.; Rose Hill, of G. P. Rogers, Esq.; Lakeview, of W. Prettie
Harris, Esq.; Temple Hill, of R. Hall, Esq.; Rosetta, of G. Frend,
Esq.; Dean Ville, of J. Mac Mullen, Esq.; Knockrea, of A. W. Webb,
Esq.; Barnstead, of the Rev. W. R. Nash; Midsummer Lodge, of Miss
Jones; Clover Hill, of C. Connell, Esq.; North Cliffe, of J. Mac
Donnell, Esq.; Prospect Lodge, of C: Terry Crofts, Esq.; Flower
Lodge, of R. Mac Mullen, Esq.; Rockville Cottage, of J. Cogan, Esq.;
Clifton Cottage, of F. C. Cole, Esq.; and Rock Cottage, of M. Smith,
Esq. Besides these seats there are numerous villas which are let
during the summer. The land is naturally very fertile, and is for
the most part enclosed in lawns, gardens, and pleasure grounds; the
rest, deriving from its contiguity to Cork an abundant supply of
rich manures, and having the advantage of inexhaustible quarries of
limestone and plenty of sea sand, is in a high state of cultivation,
and supplies the Cork market with a large proportion of its
vegetables. The substratum is limestone of excellent quality, which
is extensively quarried for various purposes. Between the fissures
of the rocks, near its junction with the clay-slate, are found
numerous amethystine crystals, some of which are very large and
clustery, and all are beautifully coloured; one specimen in the Cork
Royal Institution weighs more than 40lb.
The church, dedicated to
St. Michael, serves as a chapel of ease to the cathedral church of
St. Finbarr, Cork, and was built in 1827, at an expense of £2100, of
which £900 was given by the late Board of First Fruits, £100 by the
corporation of Cork, and the remainder, with the exception of a few
local subscriptions and the sale of pews, was defrayed by the dean
and chapter, who appoint and pay the curate. It is a handsome
edifice of hewn limestone, in the later style of architecture, with
a tower crowned with battlements and pinnacles, and surmounted by a
spire 60 feet high, which, with part of the tower and the western
portion of the nave, was destroyed by lightning on Jan. 29th, 1836,
but has been restored by aid of a grant of £310 from the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners. The R. C. chapel, erected in 1821, is
a large and handsome building, and is a chapel of ease to the
parochial chapel of St. Finbarr, or the South chapel: it was begun
at the private expense of the late Dean Collins, aided by a
subscription of £300, and was completed and elegantly fitted up by
means of a bequest of £1100 from the late T. Rochford, Esq., of
Garretstown, part of which, in 1834, was expended in the erection of
a house for the officiating priest near the chapel. An Ursuline
convent was removed hither from Cork, in 1825: it was founded in
1771, by the late Miss Honora Nagle, whose portrait is in the
visiting-room, and is the original of all the institutions of this
class founded in Ireland. The community consists of 35 professed
nuns and 6 lay sisters, and is governed by a superioress, her
deputy, and a council of six. At this institution many of the
daughters of the R. C. gentry are instructed; and in a separate
building about 100 poor girls are gratuitously taught and partially
clothed. The convent has a demesne of 42 acres, and is an ornamental
building, consisting of a centre and two wings, with a frontage of
350 feet. The chapel, which is in the east wing, is fitted up with
simple elegance and ornamented with four Ionic pilasters supporting
a pediment, on the apex of which is a cross, and at each of the
other angles a vase. It contains a neat monument to the Rev. Dr.
Lyons, who was many years chaplain to the convent. A school-house
connected with St. Michael's chapel was erected at Ballintemple in
1836; a school for boys was built in 1834, at an expense of £160, of
which two-thirds were contributed by the National Board, and the
remainder by J. Murphy, Esq., of Ring-Mahon Castle; and there is a
school for girls, supported by subscription. Here is a dispensary,
and near Ballintemple are two private lunatic asylums. Cittadella,
belonging to Joshua Bull, Esq., was established by the late Dr.
Hallaran, in 1798, and has secluded pleasure grounds for the use of
the patients. Lindville belongs to Dr. Osborne, and is pleasantly
situated in a demesne of 14 acres. A temperance society was
established in 1835. At the village of Ballintemple, situated on
this peninsula, the Knights Templars erected a large and handsome
church in 1392, which, after the dissolution of that order, was
granted, with its possessions, to Gill abbey. At what period it fell
into decay is uncertain; the burial ground is still used. There are
fragments of some ancient towers at Dundanion and Ring-Mahon, but
nothing of their history is known.