Joe visits Castlecaulfield in County Tyrone. He tells the
history of the area and how lands were granted to Toby Caulfield in the early
Seventeenth Century before meeting two archaeologists, Maybelline Gormley and
Dr Colm Donnelly, in the ruins of Castle Culfild, which gives the village its
name. They show him drawings of what it would have looked like and how it was
actually a manor house and not a castle at all.
He then moves to
Parkanaur House, walking around the aboretum and observing the herd of white
fallow deer, the only such example in Ireland. Alec Bartley exlains their
history. Local historian, Jonathan Gray, informs Joe of the history of
Parkanaur House and how the owners saw a responsibility to their tenants and
the local populace. Wilfred Mitchell then takes Joe inside the house to recount
how the house was bought by a local man who made his fortune who then handed it
to his friend for him to use the house for training for adults with cerebral
palsy, which his son suffered from. Bernie McKenna and Harold Armstrong talk in
the walled garden about the local community's use of the grounds for their
annual horticultural show.