Holy well, Taylorsgrange, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
Holy Sites & Wells
Somewhere on a north-facing slope within the grounds of St. Columba's College in Taylorsgrange, a small stone structure shaped like a beehive marks a spring that has been drawing people to it for centuries.
The well is dedicated to St. Sabh, a figure from early Irish Christian tradition, and its covering combines older dry-stone construction with a later brick-faced addition, the two materials sitting together in a way that quietly records successive rounds of attention and repair. You cannot reach the water directly any more; access to the well itself is blocked, and the spring is now pumped to an outside trough nearby.
The well falls within the parish of Whitechurch and is recorded under its Irish association with St. Sabh in the sources compiled by folklorist Caoimhín Ó Danachair in 1958 and by Healy in 1975. Holy wells of this kind, enclosed spring wells, were typically covered to protect the water source and to mark the site as one of particular significance, whether for religious veneration, pattern days, or more practical community use. The beehive form of the stonework is a traditional approach to covering such a well, a corbelled or domed capping that channels water and keeps the chamber intact without mortar-heavy construction. The brick facing added later suggests the structure was maintained and adapted rather than simply abandoned as its original devotional use declined.
The well sits within a private school campus, so access is not straightforward for casual visitors. St. Columba's College is a boarding and day school, and the grounds are not publicly open in the way a roadside monument might be. Anyone hoping to see the well would need to make contact with the college in advance. The outside trough to which the water is pumped is the most visible remnant of the well's active function, and it is worth looking for the contrast between the older stonework and the brick addition, which gives a sense of how the structure evolved across different periods of care.
