CULTRA, HOLYWOOD, CO.DOWN BT18 OEU, NORTHERN IRELAND, TEL +44 (0)28 9042 8428

Original location: Ballyveaghmore townland, Annalong, County Down
This farm, built of Mourne granite, was moved from the Mourne Mountains in south County Down. It was built in the 1840s and occupied by four generations of the Baird family until shortly before the Museum acquired the property in the late 1980s.
The farm was typical of the area, about 10 acres (4 hectares) mixed farming of arable and livestock. The dwelling is a simple two-roomed house, kitchen and bedroom, with a central hearth. The floors are of packed earth with flagstones laid around the threshold and at the hearth where foot traffic is at its heaviest.
At various times the dwelling has been added to by the building of outhouses for farm storage and accommodation for animals and poultry. The farmyard is laid out as a 'street' - a line of buildings as opposed to a courtyard layout.
A separate outhouse has been refurbished to house a small exhibition on the life and work of Emyr Estyn Evans, onetime Professor of Geography at The Queen's University, Belfast, the founder of the University's Institute of Irish Studies and a 'founding father' of the Ulster Folk Museum.
The Museum received generous assistance from the Ulster Folklife Society in acquiring, moving and re-erecting this complex of buildings as a memorial to Estyn Evans.