Holy well, Kilpadder, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Holy Sites & Wells
In a field at Kilpadder in north Cork, a holy well once stood that was believed to cure warts.
It no longer exists. Drained away during agricultural improvement works, it vanished so completely that by the time anyone thought to document it properly, there was nothing left to find and no access to the site could be gained.
The well's only surviving paper trace is an appearance on the 1842 Ordnance Survey six-inch map, the great mid-nineteenth century cartographic project that recorded Ireland's landscape in extraordinary detail, including countless wells, cairns, and local landmarks that were already beginning to disappear under the pressure of land improvement. A few decades later, the local historian James Grove White noted it in his survey of Cork parishes, published between 1905 and 1925, recording that the well had possessed the "power of destroying warts" but had been done away with when the surrounding field was drained. Holy wells in Ireland were typically sites of localised veneration, associated with particular saints or specific curative powers, and visited on pattern days or feast days for healing rituals. Wart cures were among the more common attributed powers, usually involving water, a rag tied to a nearby bush, or a small stone left behind. This one, it seems, was quietly erased before such customs could be fully recorded, leaving only Grove White's single sentence and a mark on an old map.