Standing stone, Mosstown, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Stone Monuments
In the undulating meadowland of Mosstown, County Longford, a standing stone once existed, or at least was believed to.
The peculiar thing about this site is precisely that there is nothing to see. No upright slab of weathered limestone, no worn socket in the ground, no local memory preserved in a field name. Just grass, and the quiet implication that something was once here.
The paper trail is thin but telling. The Ordnance Survey Fair Plan, the large-scale draft map produced during the Survey's meticulous early nineteenth-century mapping of Ireland, marks a standing stone at this location. Standing stones are among the most ancient and ambiguous monuments in the Irish landscape, typically prehistoric in origin and erected for purposes that remain genuinely unclear, whether as territorial markers, astronomical indicators, or focal points for ritual. Whatever its original purpose, the stone noted on the Fair Plan had apparently vanished, or been quietly removed, by the time the Ordnance Survey produced its later six-inch series maps, on which no such monument appears. There are no visible remains today.
What this amounts to is a site defined entirely by absence. The Fair Plan entry suggests the stone was present, or at least remembered, during the early decades of the Survey's work in the region, but it did not survive into the more widely consulted mapping record. Whether it was broken up for a field wall, incorporated into a building, or simply toppled and absorbed into the soil is not known.
