Desart Court was a palladian house in County Kilkenny, Ireland, built around 1733 for the first Lord Desart, John Cuffe. The architect is believed to have been Sir Edward Lovett Pearce.
Around 1733, John Cuffe, 1st Baron Desart, son of Williamite soldier Agmondesham Cuffe, developed a modern house on the lands.
On the death of the 1st Baron Desart in 1749, the house and title passed to his son John Cuffe, 2nd Baron Desart who died without a male heir in 1767.
The house then passed down to Otway Cuffe on 25 November 1767. He was soon raised to Earl of Desart on 4 December 1793 and was succeeded by his eldest son John Otway Cuffe, 2nd Earl of Desart in 1804.
William Cuffe, 4th Earl of Desart, the 4th Earl is recorded as having 8,000 acres in County Kilkenny in 1876 with a valuation of £5,778 as well as 932 acres in Tipperary. He married Odette Bischoffsheim, later Ellen Cuffe, Countess of Desart.
A new house was rebuilt on the site in 1926 using some of the original building materials by Lady Kathleen Milborne-Swinnerton-Pilkington and designed by Richard Orpen. Much of the grounds and house were later sold to the Land commission in 1934 with the wings being demolished in the 1940s and the main house subsequently torn down in 1957.
The interior of the house contained fine rococo plasterwork and cornices featuring unusual heads and masks similar to that which appears at Florence Court and furnishings from the middle of the 18th century including Chinese Chippendale chairs and inlaid Dutch cabinetry. The plasterwork looks to have been completed later than the main house around 1750-60.
The house was considered a superlative example of its kind. The architect has been referenced often as Edward Lovett Pearce who was the pre-eminent architect working in Ireland at the time and who died in 1733, although no firm evidence survives. A few feet above one of the main doors, a carved stone entablature contained "Anno Don. sic 1733" although this could also be a reference to John Cuffe being made a baron in the same year. Another possible candidate is Richard Castle who was active around the same period and took over many of Lovett Pearce's engagements upon his death. The plan of the house was also similar to the Cashel Palace which was likely designed by Lovett Pearce.
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