791 years
The Talbots of Malahide
Richard Talbot was granted the lands and harbour of Malahide by Henry II in 1185. The family held the castle through plague, rebellion, and plantation - losing it only from 1649 to 1660 when Cromwell granted it to Miles Corbet, who was later hanged for his role in the execution of Charles I, after which it reverted to the Talbots. The family were Hereditary Lords Admiral of Malahide when the harbour was still a working seaport. In 1975, the last heir, Rose Talbot, transferred the castle and demesne to the Irish state in lieu of inheritance tax. Fingal County Council now manages it. The 791-year tenure is not broken by the decade of Cromwellian occupation, because the Talbots were back in 1660 and stayed until 1975.
14 Talbots at breakfast, none at dinner
The morning of the Boyne
The story told in Malahide is this: on the morning of the Battle of the Boyne in July 1690, fourteen members of the Talbot family and their supporters breakfasted together at the castle. By evening, all fourteen were dead in the fighting. It is a story that historians have not been able to fully verify but that Malahide has told for over three hundred years. There is no reason to stop now.
The harbour that stopped working
Malahide as a seaport
Before silting reduced its depth, Malahide Harbour was a functioning seaport - one reason the Talbots were given Hereditary Lord Admiral status. The estuary is now a tidal inlet popular with waders and wildfowl, and the marina to the south of the village holds pleasure craft rather than trading vessels. The tidal flat visible from the marina is one of Dublin's better spots for estuary birdwatching.
Cyril Fry and the trains
The Casino Model Railway Museum
The Fry collection - assembled by Cyril Fry, a railway engineer at Inchicore Works - is one of the most significant collections of model trains in Ireland. It was displayed in Malahide Castle for years before moving permanently to the Casino Cottage Orné in 2020. The building, erected by the Talbot family in the early 19th century as a shooting lodge or summer house, is a near-perfect example of Cottage Orné architecture. The museum opened there in 2020. The trains are remarkable objects; the building they are in is equally so.