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Life experience: I lived as a house-sitter in Charlie Haughey's mansion ... it was pretty tacky

There was a LOT of green going on — and, intriguingly, a locked room full of paperwork.

THERE WERE CLAIMS, back in 2012, that Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi once stayed in Charlie Haughey’s palatial Kinsealy manor.

Margaret Thatcher, it was said, also once stopped by for a visit at the north Dublin mansion.

Estate agents Savills made the VIP assertions as they sought to offload the property for some €7.5 million — but were forced to backtrack, after the Haughey family said neither the Colonel nor the Iron Lady had ever taken tea with ‘the Boss’ at Abbeville.

With its own helicopter pad, stables, indoor equestrian centre, swimming pool, and 247 acres of park and woodland — the Georgian mansion was Charles Haughey’s home from 1969, when he was Finance Minister, until his death in June 2006.

With 14 bedrooms — there certainly would have been plenty of room to put up any visiting world leader for a long-weekend…

Photocall Ireland Photocall Ireland

In the years after the downturn, however, it also served as a temporary home for a number of ‘live-in guardians’ recruited by property managers Camelot.

At one point, as many as 200 people were living in disused hotels, warehouses, former garda stations and schools across the country as part of deals with the firm.

As part of the agreements, the tenants or ‘guardians’ are offered knock-down rent rates to stay in the buildings, keep them in habitable shape, and deter vandals.

From the property-owner’s point-of-view, such arrangements can mean a huge discount on insurance bills, and offer a significant saving compared to the cost of hiring live-in security or CCTV systems.

One such ‘guardian’ who lived in Haughey’s former mansion spoke to TheJournal.ie this afternoon on condition of anonymity.

His overall impression?

A lot of green. There was a LOT of green going on. There were only carpets and wallpapers left really when we were there — but it was very nouveau riche. Quite tacky, and very 1980s.

Savills Savills

The guardians were briefly allowed a look at the two more opulent ‘state rooms’ as they moved in — but the rooms were out of bounds for the rest of their stay.

There was also a “non-functional sauna that we weren’t allowed access to” —  and, intriguingly, “a locked-off room with quite a lot of paperwork”.

Then again, there was a lot of stuff going on to do with management of the property at the time, and there was also a caretaker there — so the paperwork may well have been to do with that.

The swimming pool, at that point, was “boarded over” and the heli-pad had long since been taken-over by long grass and weeds.

Savills Savills

Elsewhere, there was a “room that had clearly been used at one point for awards — it was full of empty display cases”.

A full-size snooker table was left in situ in one of the larger rooms, while there was also a private bar, with “7 or 8 barstools” and a few taps.

“There were still horses being kept on the estate too — and a few pheasants that were apparently being looked after.”

I found it odd that there were quite a few shotgun shells around — in the house… But then the estate was run as a farm, so maybe that wasn’t so unusual.

Not the average sort of house-share arrangement you might find advertised online, then.

Charles Haughey sale A bust of Charles Haughey by John Haugh at Adam's Showrooms during a sale of paintings and sculpture from Abbeville in 2009. PA Archive / Press Association Images PA Archive / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

Haughey had clearly left his personal stamp on the James Gandon-designed mansion, the guardian told us.

There was a real sense of the great dictator… You’d wonder why people weren’t asking themselves how someone in such a position could have afforded something so preposterously high and grand.

The former Taoiseach offloaded the estate to Manor Park Homes in 2003 to pay off outstanding tax bills for a reported €45 million. As part of the deal, Haughey and his wife Maureen were allowed to continue living there.

Eamon Farrell / Photocall Ireland Eamon Farrell / Photocall Ireland / Photocall Ireland

The company had intended to develop the grounds into a hotel and golf course but went into receivership before it could start any development.

It was eventually sold for some €5.5 million in November of 2013. The Sunday Business Post reported earlier this month that it was now owned by a Cufbay Limited —- a company run by former ambassador to Japan Brendan Scannell and Fergus O’Tierney, a former partner with KPMG.

Read: House-sitters bunk down in hotels, pubs and convents to keep vandals at bay

In picture: Haughey’s former mansion at Abbeville on sale for €7.5 million > 

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15 Comments
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    Mute fergalreid
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    Jan 19th 2015, 8:37 PM

    It’s James Gandon that I feel sorry for. So many of his beautiful buildings were cursed. The Custom House was burnt during the War of Independence. Ditto the Four Courts during the Civil War. And poor Abbeville, inhabited by Haughey. A fate only marginally worse than the King’s Inns, which is still packed to the rafters with lawyers ;)

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    Mute Who's Yer Man
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    Jan 19th 2015, 11:25 PM

    Emo Court seemed to have been OK. Nice place too.

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    Mute Niall Murphy
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    Jan 19th 2015, 8:40 PM

    Currently live in a Camelot gaff in Dublin 6. It’s a great system: cheap, flexible, and ideal for young people working in low-paid jobs. Properties only become available once in a blue moon, but if you’re on the lookout, keep an eye on their website and you might get lucky.

    They’re not all palatial manors, mind.

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    Mute Sam
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    Jan 19th 2015, 9:13 PM

    Was there as a kid. My grandad used to be his gardner. Had no idea at the time who he was!

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    Mute arnaas
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    Jan 20th 2015, 7:53 AM

    Was your grandad Jimmy?

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    Mute Sam
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    Jan 20th 2015, 8:38 AM

    No peter

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    Mute Carol C.
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    Jan 20th 2015, 12:08 AM

    I initially read this as ‘and a few PEASANTS that were apparently being looked after.’ …not entirely unexpected…

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    Mute David Murphey
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    Jan 19th 2015, 11:20 PM

    He was a pretty tacky person.

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    Mute Gordon Kennedy
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    Jan 19th 2015, 9:01 PM

    Reminds me of the Ozymandias poem..

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    Mute Peter Carroll
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    Jan 20th 2015, 9:56 AM

    But didn’t he train his successor ,,,,. “THE MOST CUNNING AND DEVIOUS OF THEM ALL ,”

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    Mute Nora Ahern
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    Jan 20th 2015, 2:02 PM

    I worked in rte and was part of the production crew for the address to the nation – the infamous tighten your belt speech.. After the recording I was dashing away but was held back because Charlie had agreed to take a photo with the crew. I wasn’t interested as I had nothing but contempt for the man even back then. I was unaware of how he lived but didn’t trust him at all. I also worked in Hall’s pictorial and had the pleasure of “sending up” the address the next week. I still have the ‘closing roller’ ie credits illustrated by the late Terry Willers of that visit to RTE. I feel it is a significant piece of history. The programme brought it all back . Wonderful progranne!

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    Mute Donal O Neil
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    Jan 20th 2015, 9:57 AM

    No questions asked on how this chap could afford to buy never mind run the place on minister of finance and then tshock wages . We all,had to tighten our braces in the 80,s many losing jobs and not enough opportunities for apprentiships and mass emigration .

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    Mute Conor Sweeney
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    Jan 20th 2015, 8:33 PM

    I’ve no brief for FG or FF, but how could people ever elect this OBVIOUS crook over a decent, educated, modern guy like Garrett Fitzgerald?

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    Mute Darren Jones
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    Feb 6th 2015, 12:54 AM

    Cos Garret believed the world ended when U left Dublin 4 He told Tony Gregory that it just couldn’t be done putting separate toilet facilities into the most deprived area of Dublin in the early eighties nice man but the wrong man for the job.

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    Mute Marguerite Hoiby
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    Jan 21st 2015, 4:44 PM

    I wondered the same during all those elections. Fitzgerald also came across as a genuine decent man with a touch of the nutty professor/academic whereas Haughey always came across as a sly, crook and a conniving one at that.
    But then again, I had flat mates that believed and voted for the crook at the time and people kept voting for the crook and the subsequent FF governments and now wonder why or how it all went wrong!!!!

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