Beresford employed
Lewis Nockalls Cottingham, one of the most skilled architects at that time, to restore Armagh's
St Patrick's Cathedral. Cottingham removed the old stunted spire and shored up the belfry stages while he re-built the piers and arches under it. The arcade walls which had fallen away as much as 21 inches from the perpendicular on the south side and 7 inches on the North side, were straightened by means of heated irons, and the clerestory windows which had long been concealed, were opened out, and filled with tracery. Beresford is unsympathetically represented by
Montalembert with whom he had breakfast at
Gurteen de la Poer during his tour of Ireland. Beresford died at Woburn, the home of his niece, in the parish of
Donaghadee. There is a memorial to him in the south aisle at
St Patrick's. His immediate successor as Archbishop was his first cousin once removed. == References ==