The Architecture of the Church of St Patrick and St Brigid
Citation:
Tierney, A., The Architecture of the Church of St Patrick and St Brigid, Coiseanna: Journal of the Clane Local History Group, 2021, 10, 6 - 14Download Item:

Abstract:
The post-famine period saw a boom in Catholic church building across Ireland. County Kildare, as
home to Maynooth College (1795; 1845) and Clongowes Wood College (1814), was at the forefront
of Catholic religious revival in 19th century Ireland. SS Patrick and Brigid (1876-1884) was one of
several churches in the county built by rural congregations in the new Gothic Revival style, such as
Donaghstown (1860-63), Allen (1868), Prosperous (1869). As early as the 1860s there had been an
idea of building a new chapel in the village, as parishioner Thomas M. Donellan had included in his
will of 1866 ‘£200 in trust for the purpose of assisting to build a new chapel at Clane’. The original
Catholic chapel in Clane of 1805 was of a vernacular type, internally T-shaped in plan, that had been built across Ireland after the relaxing of the penal laws in the late eighteenth century. The
construction of the new church, directly behind the site of the old, took place under the stewardship
of the Rev. Patrick Turner, an energetic priest of the parish and a champion of tenant rights. His
Latin-inscribed white marble monument, inside the church, records his death just five years after its
completion.
Sponsor
Grant Number
Irish Research Council (IRC)
15840
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/tiernea4Description:
PUBLISHED
Author: Tierney, Andrew
Type of material:
Journal ArticleSeries/Report no:
Coiseanna: Journal of the Clane Local History Group;10;
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