Press Articles
Tatler Magazine November 2006
Las Vegas Review Journal 19
November 2006
Evening Herald 20 March 2006
Sunday Tribune 27 August 2006
First International Wedding
at Crom Castle, Belfast Telegraph, 8 September 2006
The Independent on Sunday, 14
May 2006, A Taste of the Upper Crust
Impartial Reporter Newspaper,
24 February 2005
Newsletter, 28 April 2005
Ulster Tatler Magazine, May
2005
Belfast Telegraph, January 2005
CGA's Country Magazine, Oct/Nov
2005
Ulster Tatler Magazine, May 2005
Castle of Dreams - Heather White finds out about luxury
self-catering accommodation in the West Wing of Crom Castle, County
Fermanagh.
Close to the shimmering waters of Upper Lough Erne, Crom Castle
stands proud in the morning sunlight. With its turrets and towers
stretching far into the sky above, this Victorian Castle is both
enchanting and mysterious. Designed in the 1800s by the architect
Blore, who was responsible for sections of Buckingham Palace, it
is the private home of Lord and Lady Erne and is not open to the
public. However, in a new venture, the Earl and his son Viscount
Crichton are opening the West Wing as an exclusive self-catering
retreat for groups of six to eleven.
"We have got Five Star Accreditation from the Northern Ireland
Tourist Board. The uniqueness of the West Wing is the fact that
it is my son's home whenever he is in Ireland, so it is not an entirely
commercial undertaking," Lord Erne explains. A busy Estate
Agent in London with Lane Fox, the thirty-three-year-old John Crichton
obviously knows a thing or two about houses and their interiors
and as a result of his own personal input the West Wing has been
impeccably decorated and furnished.
The ideal location for a corporate 'think-tank', a management conference,
a family holiday, or a retreat for overseas visitors to Northern
Ireland, the West Wing is entirely separate from the main Castle.
With its own entrances and access to its own terrace, guests can
be assured of the utmost privacy.
Two features of the capacious accommodation downstairs are the
enormous Drawing Room which opens onto the terrace and the Dining/Kitchen
area which is housed in the Castle's former Billiard Room. The Drawing
Room, decorated in a warming daffodil yellow, is resplendent with
wonderful paintings, objets d'art, antiques and stylish period furniture.
In the vast eating area billiard room lamps hang in a trio beneath
a gothic ceiling over a cooking island, beyond which a dining table
for twelve is placed for obvious conviviality. And that is not all
- beside this table there is a magnificent open fireplace and sitting
area, the size of an average drawing room in any modern home. Additionally,
if there is a requirement for a cook, a fully equipped modern kitchen
is located behind the cooking area at the head of the room. Downstairs
too, situated off the long atmospheric corridor are ensuite bedrooms,
a TV and Computer Room - not to mention a bar, cloakroom, laundry
room, boot room and staff rooms.
Upstairs the glamour continues with more characterful ensuite bedrooms,
each styled and decorated with exquisite taste. The romantic four-poster
'Buff Room', the delicately hued 'Blue Room', the heady 'Rose Room'
and the stylish 'Print Room' to name but four of the seven bedrooms
in the West Wing.
Outside, West Wing guests will, for the first time, have access
to the Earl of Erne's private gardens. Attractions include the use
of a tennis court and a boat for exploring the lakes. Given that
the Lough Erne Yacht Club was formed at Crom in the mid 1800s as
the result of inter-familial boating races beween the Crichtons,
Saundersons and the Massey-Beresfords - a historical record hangs
in the West Wing - it is an opportunity that cannot be missed.
For those who prefer terra firma, there are the Crom parklands
to explore. Some 1,900 acres are currently managed by the National
Trust, giving the public an opportunity to experience the tranquility
and beauty of this veritable nature reserve. An area of important
conservation Crom houses the largest surviving area of oak woodland
in Northern Ireland, and one of the most important and least spoilt
freshwater habitats in the British Isles. The wealth of wildlife
in the estate is exemplified by the presence of two rare butterflies
- the purple hair streak and wood white, the elusive pine marten
and the largest herony in Ireland.
As the Earl takes me on a tour of the grounds we walk through what
is left of old Crom Castle. As with all Irish seats of such stature,
the history of Crom is rich and colourful. The original castle was
built in 1611 by a Scottish Planter, Michael Balfour, and was acquired
in 1644 by the Crichtons, ancestors of the Earls of Erne. Having
survived two ferocious Jacobite sieges in 1689 it met an untimely
demise in the 1740s as the result of a domestic fire.
Standing in what was once a lakeshore tower of the old castle,
Lord Erne points to the stunning vista. "If you were to ask
me what sums up Crom for me, I suppose I would have to say this
viewpoint." The subsequent sweep of his arm across the entire
lakeland and countryside before us, an indication of the expanse
that is the Crom Estate in County Fermanagh. "On our left we
have the South of Ireland, in the middle of the lake Crichton Tower
on Gad Island, across the water, on Garden Island, Holy Trinity
Church where we go every Sunday by boat, and returning to this side
of the lake the Crom tea house where it was once customary for the
family to take refreshments, and the boathouse."
As he talks a flock of wild geese flies overhead and in the distance
deer can be espied running through the parkland. Close by, at the
original entrance of the old castle garden, two magnificent yew
trees, one male and one female, have formed a citadel of branches.
Over 800 years old, and reputed to be the oldest in Ireland, this
giant of nature is testimony to the longevity that is Crom.
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