Holy well, Oldtown (Bennett), Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Holy Sites & Wells
Sometimes the most telling thing about a holy well is not what has been preserved, but what has been lost.
In a field in Oldtown, in County Limerick, there survives a well that has shed almost every trace of the devotional life it once held. No pattern day is remembered, no patron saint is named, no cure is attributed to its waters. The only tradition that lingers, passed on so loosely it barely counts as tradition at all, is a vague sense that it was, in someone's words, "some sort of blessed well."
The folklorist Caoimhín Ó Danachair recorded this site in 1955, noting that the 1928 edition of the six-inch Ordnance Survey map had given it the name Toberahoundree. The "Tobar" element is straightforward Irish for a well or spring, a prefix that appears on holy wells across the country. By the time Ó Danachair visited, the well had already been damaged by cattle trampling, and whatever physical features or local customs might once have distinguished it, including the pattern of offerings, rags, or rounded stones that often accumulate at such sites, were gone. Holy wells were typically focal points for local religious practice, associated with specific feast days and sometimes with healing rites that blended pre-Christian custom with Catholic devotion. Here, that entire world of local meaning had dissolved.
The site lies in the Oldtown townland in the Bennett area of County Limerick. Because the well has no surviving markers, no votive objects, and no maintained structure around it, finding it requires some patience and local knowledge. The landscape is agricultural, and the kind of wear that the 1955 account describes suggests the well may sit in or very close to a working field. Visitors interested in this kind of marginal, half-forgotten place should treat it as a study in absence as much as presence; what the broken ground and cattle-worn edges point to is a devotional culture that was once widespread and quietly ordinary, and has since become almost entirely invisible.