Headstone, Seanchluain, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Religious Objects
Among the old gravestones of Seanchluain in County Waterford, one in particular carries a small but telling detail: a marked date of 1770 and the name of a Catholic priest, Fr. Richard Halahan. In the Ireland of the late eighteenth century, that combination was not unremarkable. The Penal Laws, which restricted Catholic religious practice and civic life across Ireland from the late seventeenth century onward, were only beginning to ease by the 1770s. A priest named on a headstone, in a graveyard attached to a ruined church, represents a moment when such acknowledgement was just becoming possible again.
The headstone sits within the graveyard at Ringogoona, beside the remains of a church in the townland of Seanchluain. The site was noted by the Reverend P. Power in his 1898 survey of the ancient ruined churches of County Waterford, published in the Waterford Archaeological Journal. Power was a careful local historian, and his work remains a primary source for ecclesiastical remains across the county. Beyond the name, the date, and the priestly title, the stone itself is not elaborated upon in any surviving detail, which gives it a certain quiet weight. It marks a man, a moment, and a place without embellishment.