Holy well, Ballyvorheen, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Holy Sites & Wells
Somewhere in the poorly drained pasture of Ballyvorheen, a shallow pool sits in a slight depression on a north-facing slope, measuring less than three metres across in any direction.
There is no willow tree here now, no votive offerings, no knotted rags on a nearby branch. What remains is a sub-oval hollow containing water, which is almost all that is left of a holy well once believed to cure sore eyes and said to have been blessed by St. Patrick himself.
The folklorist Caoimhín Ó Danachair documented the well in 1955, describing a small spring issuing beneath the roots of an old willow tree, roughly built with dry stone, in a little glade. Holy wells, which are typically natural springs venerated since early Christian or even pre-Christian times and often associated with a patron saint or a particular curative property, were once common focal points for local devotion across Ireland. This one carried a Patrician association and a specific claim about the healing of eyes, both features that appear regularly in the folklore of such sites. Ó Danachair also photographed the well in 1954, and those images are now held by the National Folklore Collection at UCD, accessible through the Dúchas archive online at duchas.ie.
The site sits at the southern extent of a low mound on a slope that descends toward a stream, sheltered on three sides and open to moderate views westward. The ground is undulating and poorly drained, so the approach across the pasture is likely to be wet underfoot in most seasons. There is nothing to announce the well's presence from a distance; the depression is shallow and easily missed. The willow that Ó Danachair described is gone entirely, and there are no signs of active devotion. What a visitor is really looking at is the memory of a place, preserved in measurements and in photographs rather than in living practice.
