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HISTORY Old
Churches of the Parish
Tarmon
Abbey On the Nunnery
Point Kilbride
The
earliest Church in the parish was founded by St Hugh on the
The date of the construction of the church is carved on the lintel over the doorway, 1735. The church grounds gradually replaced the island as a place of burial.
The
Bog Chapel As can be seen from the above photograph of the site of the Bog Chapel in Carrowlaur, little or nothing of the original building now remains. The Chapel served the people of the parish until the present St Brigid’s Church was completed in 1869.
The
Bog Chapel was built in the townland of Carrowlaur. Nothing is known about
when it was built, but it probably was constructed during the early days of the
Penal Laws, i.e.1750. Like the
church in Kilbride, the Bog Chapel was called after St Brigid and it was
probably built sometime after the Kilbride was built.
Unusually, it did not have an adjoining grave yard.
This fact, as well as the fact that Carrowlaur would have been somewhat
backward, would suggest that it was built during the height of the
implementation of the Penal Laws. Built
in the form of a “T”, its transepts were wider and longer that the nave.
The altar was built against the centre of the long transept wall and a
small sacristy was constructed behind the altar.
A government Commission reported in 1831 that the average attendance at
Mass in the Bog Chapel was 2,500. By
that time there were two other churches in use in the parish, one in Tarmon and
the other in Newbridge. Fr Tom
Maguire used his oratorical talents to help raise funds for these churches in
The
stones of the Bog Chapel were used in the construction of
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