As there was much activity when I arrived I decided that it was not appropriate to photograph this cemetery in greater detail, maybe I will visit again next year.
St Otteran is variously described as a son or a companion or a predecessor of St Columba on the island of Iona, where there is a graveyard in his honour, the “Reilg Odhráin”. He is also the principal patron of the diocese of Waterford, having been chosen for that honour by the Vikings. They had buried some of their dead on Iona and were the first occupiers of Waterford city.
St. Otteran’s Burial Ground, also known as Ballinaneeshagh Burial Ground, is operated by Waterford City & County Council. It was in use from the early 19th century but only enclosed and laid out in 1877. There were a number of burials prior to the attempt to provide a plan for the burial ground. There is no register for these earlier burials. The first 426 plots on the burial register were left blank in the hope that the ‘Burial Board’ could fill in the details later but this never occurred.
The first record from the burial register dates to 12th September 1862 and Waterford City and County Archive holds the original burial registers from 1862 until 1966 but there are some gaps. Unfortunately, burials did not always strictly adhere to the plan of burial plots laid out so further investigation may be required when searching for a plot found in the register.
ST. JOHN’S GRAVEYARD DUBLIN ROAD KILKENNY – OLD CHURCHYARD
This old churchyard is known as St. John’s and it is located on Dublin Road not far from Kilkenny railway station. I visited this graveyard a number of times in the past but the weather has always been bad and the light was usually poor. This year things were much better however my camera-lens combination was giving problems.
The colour of the gravestones is different to what I normally see in Irish graveyards [orange/brown rather than grey/white ].
The graveyard is very open and there many signs of anti-social behaviour but on balance I would guess that much of the decline and decay of the graves is natural rather than as a result of vandalism. In some cases the collapse of gravestones and monuments may be as a result of poor workmanship or poor quality materials. I suppose the dead are not in a position to complain.
Is is described as being “a picturesque graveyard forming an appealing feature in the streetscape on the road leading out of Kilkenny to the south-east. Having origins in a fourteenth-century leper hospital the grounds are of special significance as the location of a seventeenth-century Catholic chapel, thereby representing an early ecclesiastical site in the locality: furthermore it is believed that fragments survive spanning the fourteenth and seventeenth centuries, thereby emphasising the archaeological importance of the site. The graveyard remains of additional importance for the associations with a number of Kilkenny’s foremost dignitaries or personalities while a collection of cut-stone markers displaying expert stone masonry identify the considerable artistic design.”
ST MARY’S CHURCH OF IRELAND CHURCH – MY FIRST EVER VISIT
The church in my photographs was built in 1846, however the land it sits on a religious site going back to 500 AD.
The cemetery has graves dating back to the 1600s.
I visited this churchyard twice in two days as I wanted to compare two camera body-lens combinations. This session I used a Sony A7RIV with a Sony 28-135 lens [an expensive lens] and the following day I used a Canon 1Ds MkIII with a Sigma 24-105mm lens [the Canon body is very old but the lens is new]. Other than the fact that the Sony 28-135 lens is very heavy I have decided that the Sony combination is my preferred option however the Canon was better than I had expected and I like using it even though I only have three suitable lenses.
MY FIRST VISIT TO DRUMCONDRA CHURCH – CHURCH OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
I arrived just before 5PM only to discover that the grounds close to the public at 4PM but a church official/volunteer kindly permitted me to photograph the ground until about 6PM and he also provided me with a lot of information relating the the parish and the church.
Drumcondra Church of Ireland is a Church of Ireland church located in Drumcondra, Dublin, previously in the Civil Parish of Clonturk. The church and its churchyard contain memorials to a number of notable historical figures.
In 1743 the dilapidated old church of the parish of Clonturk was rebuilt by a Miss Coghill as a memorial to her brother, who lived in Drumcondra House, Dr. Marmaduke Coghill, who died in 1738. On the northside of the church is the large tomb of Dr. Coghill, born in 1673 in Dublin, who was a judge of the Prerogative Court and Chancellor of the Exchequer, as well as being an MP in the Irish Parliament. On the tomb reclines his effigy in his official robes, with figures of Minerva and Religion below.
By about 1721, Marmaduke Coghill was in control of the interments. In 1733 Henry Hamilton was succeeded as incumbent by Edward Hudson, followed by Robert Johnson in 1740, in 1748 James Edkins, 1781 Charles O’Neill, 1789 Jacob Cramer, 1816 William Barlow, and in 1826, James Duncan Long.
In 1896 Drumcondra parish was merged with North Strand.
Today, together with the North Strand Church (Waterloo Avenue) it serves the Anglican community as part of the Parish of Drumcondra, North Strand, and St Barnabas. The Parish would be bounded by Clontarf Parish (confusingly also dedicated to St. John the Baptist) to the east, St. Mobhi’s Church, Glasnevin, to the West, and St. Pappan’s Church, Santry to the North. Since 2016 Drumcondra (and North Strand) also serve the Parish of St. George and St. Thomas, which is to the South of Drumcondra Church.
The church contains a memorial to parishioners who fought in the Great War.
A report of 1831 stated that the churchyard was in a deplorable condition – no sooner was a body buried but it was removed by body-snatchers. Over the following two years the church and churchyard were renovated and a cottage was provided for a watchman to watch over the graves at all times.
Notable people buried in the churchyard include:
James Gandon (1743–1823), architect, designer of the Custom House, Dublin. Gandon was buried by his own request in the grave of his lifelong friend, Francis Grose.
Francis Grose (1731–1791), antiquary, died in the home of Horace Hone and was buried 18 May 1791 on the south-side of the churchyard in the presence of his nephew Lieutenant Daniel Grose, Horace and Camillus Hone, James Gandon and Christopher Pack the painter. A view of the church and churchyard drawn by Daniel Grose bears the inscription: To James Gandon and Samuel Walker Esqrs., Mr. Horace Hone and Richd. Edwd. Mercier who attended the funeral of the late Francis Grose Esqr. to the Church of Drumcondra near Dublin, where his Remains were deposited 18th May, 1791. The figure of Captain Grose in the image is placed on his own grave.
Thomas Furlong, poet, who translated Carolan’s The Irish Minstrelsy, died in 1827 aged 33 years and was buried near the monument of Francis Grose. His grave bore the memorial: To the Memory of Thomas FURLONG, Esq. In whom the purest principles of Patriotism and honour were combined with Superior Poetic Genius This Memorial of Friendship is erected by those who valued and admired his various talents, public integrity and private worth. He died 25th July, 1827 aged 33 years. May he rest in peace!
Theophilus Moore, who was buried near Thomas Furlong, settled on the Palmerston estate in Old Rathmines and opened an academy where Thomas Moore the poet, a namesake and kinsman, attended. Shortly after coming to Dublin, Theophilus Moore first published Old Moore’s Almanac in 1764.
George Grierson (c 1678–1753), printer and publisher. In 1720 he was one of the churchwardens. Grierson married three times. His first wife was buried on 19 May 1726. He married secondly in 1726 the talented editor and poet Constantia Crawley, who was buried 4 December 1732 and other Griersons were buried 30 July 1731,[13] 20 March 1732, and 11 March 1739.
Patrick Heeney (1881–1911), composer of the music of the Irish national anthem “Amhrán na bhFiann” (“The Soldier’s Song”). Two Commonwealth service war graves – a Drummer of the Royal Engineers of World War I and a Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve officer of World War II.
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