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This
Church and Cemetery has served the
Parish of Uibh Laoghaire
for at least five hundred years.
It has always been used
by all parishioners, of
all religious persuasions.
It serves as a resting place for many who bitterly opposed colonialism as well as many who died trying to preserve it. To many of us it symbolises a united and peaceful community.
The first reference to it is found in Vatican records in 1492, but it had probably been in existence for many years before this. The Parish was, and still is, in the Diocese of Cork.
After the Reformation in 1534 all Parish Churches in Ireland were confiscated and allocated to the new Established Church, the Church of Ireland. It took many years for this change to reach small out-of-the-way places such as Inchigeelagh, and the local Chieftains, the O Learys, and their followers, clung fiercely to their old Religion.
After 1700 the old lands
of the O Learys were sold
by the Hollow Sword Blade
Company to a number of
new and Protestant Landlords,
and they in turn brought
in Protestant tenants
when they could be persuaded.
The Rev.Cornelius Hignett
restored the ruined Church
and started to provide
services to the small
Protestant community.
The
Church was rebuilt in
1814 to hold 100 and at
a cost of £230-15s-4
3/4d. This is the actual
building you see now.

In
1859 the Glebe House was
demolished, and a new one
built on the North side
of the road, at a cost of
£647-1s-0d. Its ruins
can be seen to the North
of the church. The new house
was a handsome three storey
Georgian structure. It was
occupied by the clergy until
1909 when the parish was
united with Macroom and
the church abandoed. A farmer
then occupied it until the
military authorities planned
to use it as a garrison.
It was burned down by the
Irregulars in 1922 to prevent
it falling into the hands
of the Black and Tans, after
the occupier had been warned
and helped to remove his
possessions.
This has been a place of worship for over 500 years, and a last resting place for our loved ones, irrespective of their Religious convictions, for just as long. Let us respect their memories by keeping this a Place of Peace & Beauty.

