Description
Detached, gable-fronted, single-cell Church of Ireland church, originally built around 1765 and modified in approximately 1825, 1831, and 1860. The church features a three-bay nave (north and south elevations), a gable-fronted, single-bay entrance porch on the west gable (now roofless and collapsing), and a single-bay sacristy extension with a basement section on the east end of the north nave. Access to the sacristy is via a flight of cut limestone steps with wrought-iron railings over the basement level. The church has been disused since 1987.
The building has a pitched natural slate roof with raised cut limestone verges at the gable ends (east and west). A limestone bellcote sits at the apex of the west gable, featuring dressed coping, while a cut limestone chimneystack crowns the east gable. Some cast-iron rainwater goods remain in place. The sacristy extension has a pitched and hipped natural slate roof, while the main structure is finished with roughcast render over roughly coursed limestone walls. The sacristy walls are built with snecked limestone, and the porch addition features roughcast render over brick.
The church has round-headed window openings with timber Y-tracery and leaded glass, though the south nave windows are blocked with breeze blocks. Square-headed door openings exist in the porch and north extension, with the latter also blocked with breeze blocks, while the former retains timber battened doors.
The site is set back from the road to the west of Ardagh and is surrounded by a graveyard containing a collection of recumbent, upright, and box-type grave markers dating from the mid-17th to the early 20th century. A rubble stone enclosure with rounded coping on the north side of the nave, near the sacristy extension, houses a box-type memorial. Some graves are enclosed with cast-iron railings.
The property is surrounded by roughly coursed limestone boundary walls topped with crenellated rubble limestone coping. A modern limestone date plaque is located on the east side of the enclosure. The main entrance gateway, situated on the east side, consists of a pair of dressed ashlar limestone gate piers on a square plan, capped with stone, and fitted with a wrought-iron gate.
Please note that this information may not be up-to-date.
Cemetery Committee:
Mr. Victor McCord - Tel: 043-75037
Clergy:
Rev. Canon A.W. Kingston - Tel: 090-6438945
Burial Registers:
Available through:
Rev. Canon A.W. Kingston - Tel: 090-6438945
RCB Library, Dublin - Tel: 01-4923979
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