Catholic Church, Creagh, Co. Galway
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Churches & Chapels
What remains of the Catholic church at Creagh in County Galway amounts to little more than a metre of wall rising out of the undergrowth, yet even that modest remnant contains a quiet curiosity: a holy water font inscribed with markings from a still earlier place of worship, set into the fabric of a building that itself no longer serves any purpose.
Two churches have effectively vanished on this spot, one absorbed into the next, and the next swallowed by the ground.
The church was built in 1824, constructed to replace an older chapel that had stood nearby. It served the local Catholic community for ninety years before being abandoned in 1914. When the writer Egan visited and described it in detail, the walls were evidently still standing to a considerable height; he was able to record the building fully. Since then, the structure appears to have been deliberately levelled, reducing what had been a complete rectangular building, oriented east to west and measuring seventeen metres long by twelve and a half metres wide, to its lowest courses. The doorway in the west wall survives, and immediately to its south sits that font, carried over from the earlier chapel when the 1824 building was raised. Several window openings are also still visible in the north and south walls and in the east gable, though some have been blocked.
The site sits immediately north-west of a later chapel that replaced it, meaning the two buildings occupy the same small patch of ground in a kind of compressed sequence, each generation of worship nudging aside the last. The font, having outlasted two churches and presumably transferred from one to the other as a deliberately preserved object, is the most tangible link across that span.