Church, Ballycoskery, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Churches & Chapels
In the village of Ballyhay in north Cork, a modest Catholic church carries a date plaque on its west gable reading AD 1831, placing its construction in the years immediately following Catholic Emancipation.
That timing is not incidental. Before 1829, Catholics in Ireland were barred from building prominent or elaborate places of worship, and many early nineteenth-century rural chapels were deliberately plain. What makes this one quietly notable is the contrast between its unassuming exterior and what was built inside.
The church appears on the 1842 Ordnance Survey six-inch map, labelled as Newtown R. C. Chapel, shown as a rectangular structure orientated east to west, with a projection at the east end. The building has been modernised since then, acquiring five round-headed windows along each side wall, a round-headed window above the west porch, and a gabled sacristy at the east end, with a second rectangular structure attached to the north side of the sacristy. But the interior retains a classical reredos, the ornamental screen behind the altar, that is genuinely fine by any measure. It features composite fluted columns, a classical order that combines elements of Ionic and Corinthian capitals, supporting a segmental pediment, a shallow curved arch form associated with Renaissance and Baroque architectural tradition. Doors on either side of the reredos lead through into the sacristy, integrating the decorative scheme with the practical layout of the building. For a rural chapel built in the early 1830s in north Cork, this is a considered and accomplished piece of interior work, suggesting either a skilled local craftsman or a patron with clear architectural ambitions.