Holy well, Lehenagh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Holy Sites & Wells
On the western edge of Dunworly Bay in West Cork, there is a holy well that no longer exists, at least not in any form that can be visited or seen.
It appears on the old Ordnance Survey six-inch maps, plotted carefully on the cliff-edge as though it would always be there, but the cliff itself has long since given way, taking the well with it into the sea.
Holy wells in Ireland are typically springs or water sources associated with local saints or older devotional traditions, often marked by offerings, prayers, or annual patterns, the communal gatherings held on a patron saint's feast day. This one sat on the western side of Dunworly Bay, close enough to the cliff that coastal erosion eventually claimed it entirely. The site survives only in cartographic memory and in local tradition, where it is still recalled as a holy well. That combination, the official record marking a place that the land itself has swallowed, gives it a particular quality. It is a site defined almost entirely by absence.
There is nothing left to find at the location, and the collapsed cliff makes any meaningful approach impossible. What remains is the name, the map reference, and the knowledge that people once thought the place worth marking and worth remembering.