Labane Catholic Church, Ballylara, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Churches & Chapels
In the townland of Ballylara, in the south Galway parish of Labane, there sits a Catholic church that has slipped quietly through the gaps of the formal record.
It is the kind of place that appears on maps and in the memories of local families, yet resists easy documentation, its history held closer to the ground than to any catalogue.
Labane parish itself occupies a stretch of east County Galway that saw considerable upheaval during the centuries of Penal Law restriction, when Catholic worship was driven from formal buildings and conducted instead at open-air Mass rocks or in modest, unadorned structures that drew little official attention. Many rural Catholic churches in this part of Connacht were built or rebuilt during the decades following Catholic Emancipation in 1829, when congregations finally had both the legal freedom and, gradually, the means to erect permanent places of worship. These buildings were often plain by design, reflecting the economic circumstances of largely agrarian communities in the west of Ireland, and they tend to be less studied than the medieval parish churches and abbey ruins that attract more immediate antiquarian interest. That comparative plainness, and the administrative inertia that sometimes surrounds such structures, can leave them without the detailed public record that more celebrated buildings enjoy.