Glenville contains a number of sites of historical interest including a famine walk and a
mass rock dating to penal times. The Owenbawn River, which flows through the village to the south, is spanned by a bridge which dates to the 1790s. The local
Church of Ireland church, St. Mary's Ardnageehy, dates from the same period. The village's
Roman Catholic church is dedicated to Saint Joseph and was built c.1890. A large manor house and estate, known locally as "The Manor" was built in the late 19th century on the site of a former 18th-century house. This estate, originally a
Coppinger property, was sold to the Hudson family in the early 1770s. The Hudsons built a new house and this house was added to in 1887. E. G. Hudson was a resident at Glenville in 1814 and
Samuel Lewis records the Reverend E. G. Hudson as the proprietor of Mount Pleasant in the parish of Ardnageehy in 1837. In the mid-19th century William E. Hudson held the property valued at £46 in fee. Inherited by William E. Hudson's nephew Sir Edward Hudson Kinahan who was the occupier in 1906 when the house was valued at £150. Sold to the Bence Jones family in 1949. Also known as Mount Prospect and The Manor, this house was the home of the author
Mark Bence-Jones. ==People==