Gravelstown Castle, Gravelstown, Co. Meath
In the townland of Gravelstown in County Meath, the remnants of a castle tell a story of centuries of Irish history.
Gravelstown Castle, Gravelstown, Co. Meath
First recorded on the Down Survey maps of 1656-8, this castle once formed part of a 350-acre estate owned by the Baron of Howth in 1640. By the time of the Civil Survey in 1654-6, it was already described as a ‘waste castle’, suggesting it had fallen into ruin even before Cromwell’s surveyors arrived to document Ireland’s landscape.
The castle’s gradual disappearance can be traced through historical maps. The 1836 Ordnance Survey six-inch map shows it as a single structure within a farm complex, whilst by 1908 it appeared as a shell measuring approximately 10 metres northeast to southwest and 5 metres northwest to southeast, with a projection visible at the eastern end of the northwest wall. Today, only a small, featureless portion of the northeast wall survives, standing as a quiet witness to the property’s long history.
Located in Emlagh parish within the barony of Kells, Gravelstown Castle represents one of many tower houses and fortified dwellings that once dotted the Meath countryside. These structures served as both defensive positions and symbols of authority for Anglo-Norman and Gaelic Irish families throughout the medieval and early modern periods. Though little remains of this particular castle, its documentation in surveys and maps provides valuable insights into land ownership patterns and the changing fortunes of Ireland’s landed estates from the 17th century onwards.





