Well, Rush, Co. Dublin

Co. Dublin |

Utility Structures

Well, Rush, Co. Dublin

Not every well in Ireland carries the weight of saints or miracles.

The one sitting at the junction of Brook Lane and Farrans Lane in Rush, County Dublin, seems to have escaped that particular tradition entirely. There is no pattern day recorded here, no rounds to be walked, no rags tied to nearby branches. What remains is something more prosaic and, in its way, more quietly interesting: an overgrown, enclosed spring on the south side of a small stream, its kerbing still partially visible beneath the vegetation, known locally not for any sacred association but simply as the source of drinking water for a cottage on the opposite side of the lane.

The well was recorded as part of a wider survey of such sites, compiled by Geraldine Stout and updated by Christine Baker, with details uploaded in December 2014. Holy wells are a familiar feature of the Irish landscape, typically associated with a patron saint and local rituals of veneration, but this one sits outside that category. It is, at its core, a spring, enclosed at some point to make it serviceable, with enough stonework remaining to suggest it was once maintained with some care. The cottage it supplied is no longer documented in detail, but the well's function was entirely domestic rather than devotional, which makes it something of an outlier among recorded well sites.

The junction of Brook Lane and Farrans Lane is within Rush village itself, so the site is not difficult to locate, though the well is heavily overgrown and easy to walk past without noticing. The remaining kerbing is the clearest physical indicator of what you are looking at. Access is along the lane, and the proximity to the stream means the ground can be soft underfoot depending on the season. There is no formal access point or signage. What is worth paying attention to is the small remnant of stonework and the relationship between the spring, the stream, and the lane, which together suggest how a working village once organised its most basic needs around the natural geography of the place.

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