Dรบchas na Sionna members pictured recently at Hastings Farmhouse

DรšCHAS Na Sionna CLG has been granted permission by Clare County Council to restore the near-two hundred year-old Hastings Farmhouse building in Shannon.

They lodged plans in May to transform the farmhouse into a cultural centre and heritage site which Clare County Council have given the green light for them to proceed with. A services facility will also be built by the voluntary group using traditional packed clay walls as in the riverside farmhouse.

Situated between Shannon Crematorium and Illaunmanagh Graveyard, the former family home of the Hastings family was first referenced in the Ordnance Survey Map of 1840. The farmhouse was at the centre of a busy 27-acre farm for many generations until the death of John Hastings in 1968.

Last residents vacated the house in the 1970s. The building was previously used as a safehouse by the IRA during the War of Independence from 1919 to 1921 where British Brigadier General Lucas was imprisoned before later being released by the volunteers.

Built directly from the surrounding clay soil, the lime-washed building with mud-packed walls suffered badly from vandalism in the 1970s, and after the thatch roof was burned, vines and vegetation took hold and the rain and wind devastated the walls over the following four decades. Rediscovered in 2012, a group of voluntary locals emerged and they battled the briars, cleared the site and began their conservation work.

Now, more than a decade later, Hastings Farmhouse is to be restored to its rightful place and John Oโ€™Brien, chairman of the voluntary group said,: โ€œWeโ€™re delighted to receive the news that Clare County Council has granted Dรบchas na Sionna planning permission to restore the farmhouse and to build a new services facility. Weโ€™re not quite there yet in the planning process and we will also have a lot more work to do before the rebuilding starts early next year, but it seems to me that thirteen years after we started on this project itโ€™s a very lucky day for the farmhouse and for Shannonโ€.

Olive Carey, the secretary of Dรบchas na Sionna said they are really looking forward to restoring Hastings Farmhouse and opening the exhibition gallery space, the meeting venue for the community and the training facility for local companies and organisations โ€œWe have used the Hastings site for traditional craft building courses and for Heritage Week events and are undertaking a three-day archaeological dig ahead of our annual fun day on Sunday next, August 24th. The event begins at 2pm where the community will be entertained and learn more about the history of the houseโ€.

Related News

meals on wheels 09-04-20 12
'Regulation gone mad' - no urgency to solve removal of North & West Clare schools from hot meals scheme
health meeting 13-10-25 1
Mid-West Oireachtas members back three-tier hospital expansion plan for region
st tolas national school playground 1
Playground lit up at St Tola's NS with addition of new facility
roundabout shannon green
Roundabout concepts to tell Shannon's story
Latest News
kilmihil v banner ladies 05-10-25 timmy ryan 1
Kilmihil determined to push on in Munster following county success
gearoid curtin 1
Final loss to ร‰ire ร“g 'stood to Liscannor' - Curtin
รฉire รณg v doora barefield 12-10-25 aaron fitzgerald 1
ร‰ire ร“g win historic senior double
corofin v cooraclare 12-10-25 gearoid cahill john rees 1
Corofin crowned intermediate champions for fifth time
o'callaghans mills vs ruan 04-10-25 cormac murphy 1
Mills clocking up the hard yards in run to Clare PIHC final
Premium
ร‰ire ร“g win historic senior double
Corofin crowned intermediate champions for fifth time
Mills clocking up the hard yards in run to Clare PIHC final
'Managing ten times more stressful than playing' says Daly as he bids to guide Cooraclare back to top tier
Three-in-row still on track for Truagh/Clonlara

Advertisement

Subscribe for just โ‚ฌ3 per month

If youโ€™re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just โ‚ฌ3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter โ‚ฌ8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.