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White Elephants - The Country House and the State in Independent Ireland, 1922-73 (Hardcover)
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White Elephants - The Country House and the State in Independent Ireland, 1922-73 (Hardcover)
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Grand, awe-inspiring and beautiful, the `Big House' is widely
viewed as a jewel in the Irish landscape today. Despite this, the
relationship between the country house and the state has long been
complex and nuanced. Houses such as Castletown, Mote Park, and
Shanbally Castle have faced sometimes insurmountable threats to
their survival since the founding of the Free State. Against a
backdrop of civil war and social upheaval, the fledging government
of 1922 was unwilling to accept the burdensome gifts of these
extravagant but ineffectual `white elephants' at a time when much
of the population lived in poverty. From the 1920s to the 1970s,
hundreds of former landlords' residences - often seen as symbols of
British oppression - were sold on, demolished or simply abandoned
to ruin. Despite the significant change that took place in terms of
the perception of these houses as part of the national heritage,
the relationship between the state post-independence and the
country house has not been examined in detail to date. Analysing
previously unused government records, White Elephants illustrates
the complex attitudes of politicians such as Erskine Childers, Sean
Moylan and Charles J. Haughey to the country house and the crucial
role of senior civil servants in determining their fates. The
actions of the Office of Public Works and the Land Commission are
here analysed and weighed, while the effects of land division and
the alienation of the Anglo-Irish class are seen through the
often-revealing lens of Department of the Taoiseach and Department
of Finance files. These previously unmined sources uncover the more
personal history and attitudes behind decisions for demolition or
salvation. Drawing on case studies of significant Irish houses
including Bishopscourt, Derrynane, Dunsandle, Hazelwood, Killarney,
Muckross and Russborough, White Elephants tracks the compelling
development of the Irish country house from burden to heritage
site, running in parallel with the development of Ireland from a
fledgling state to taking its place in the international community
of the EEC in 1973.
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