Parish of Raheny (Roman Catholic)

Parish of Raheny (Roman Catholic)

The Parish of Raheny is the modern successor in the Roman Catholic Church to an early (1152) parish, in Raheny, a district of Dublin, Ireland reputed to be a site of Christian settlement back to at least 570 AD. Today's parish, within the Howth Deanery of the Archdiocese of Dublin comprises Raheny village and the central portion of the district, parts of which are also served by the parishes of Killester, Grange Park and Kilbarrack-Foxfield. The parish has a membership of around 10,000 Catholics.

Similarly centred, and covering a greater land area, is the Church of Ireland parish of the same name.

History

Early history

The Celtic Church was primarily based around monastic settlements, and it is a local tradition that the area's patron saint, St. Assam, possibly a disciple of St. Patrick, established a church here.

Around the start of the second millennium, part of the area was subject to the monastery, linked to St. Nessan, on Ireland's Eye, and around 1039, territories thought to be Portrane, Baldoyle and Raheny were in the possession of the Danish King of Dublin, Sigtrygg Silkbeard, who granted farmland in the area to Christ Church Cathedral, newly-established under the first Bishop of Dublin, Donat (at that time the parish itself lay in the Diocese of Glendalough, the proto-Diocese of Dublin being confined to the walled city).

In the 1100's, the Irish Church moved towards a parochial model, and following restructuring under figures such as St. Malachy, Archbishop of Armagh, and the Papal Legate Cardinal Paparo in 1152, thirty-eight dioceses, each comprising a number of parishes, were approved. The Diocese of Dublin, previously a small "island" in the middle of the vast Diocese of Glendalough, was raised to the status of Archdiocese, with forty parishes, one of which was Raheny, in the Deanery of Fingal. The boundaries of this ancient parish are probably best reflected today in those of the Civil Parish, and of the Church of Ireland parish of the same name.

Shortly after formation, the Anglo-Norman invasion impacted the whole Dublin region, and Raheny changed hands more than once in the following years, though it is not always clear what effect such changes had on the Church locally. In 1171, a Dane called Gill Mololmoa (Gilcolm) was a landholder in the area, and around this time, part of Raheny (Rathenny) was taken from Gilcolm and granted by Strongbow to the Norman knight John deCourcey, a descendent of whose, of the same name, was "Lord of Rathenny and Kilbarrock" at the beginning of the 13th century. By 1225, much of Raheny still belonged to Christ Church, but some appears to have been in the hands of St. Mary's Abbey, who acquired Christ Church's part in a swap; these holdings are confirmed in a Papal Bull (Pope Clement III) of 1189, and a renewed grant by King John, which specifically mentions a church building. There are further references in abbey records of 1296 and 1310, and the church, along with those of Grange (Baldoyle) and Coolock, is mentioned in a will of 1472.

The only clergyman mentioned for the period up to 1615 was one Thomas, a rector appointed by the Crown, who was in office in 1226; in fact, for much of this period, it is believed that the local rector or curate, as the offices were then known, was appointed by St. Mary's Abbey.

From the dissolution of the monasteries to 1909

At the Dissolution of the Monasteries, while St. Mary's survived in 1537, it was ended in 1539, and its lands at Raheny passed to the Crown, and on to, largely, the Lords of Howth. This also ended the right of presentation of the Abbey and its Prior.

Following the break between Henry VIII and the Papacy, the Anglican Churches came into being and sometime between this point and the early years of the reign of Elizabeth I (see Elizabethan Settlement), there emerged two Parishes of Raheny, one in the Roman Catholic Church, one in the Church of Ireland. There is no record of the original church during this time, and as happened in many parishes, it may have been allowed to fall into ruin.

The Catholic Church in Ireland came under increasing pressure, and with the assumption of control of properties by the new Church of Ireland, found itself without many places of worship, and with its priests under suspicion. One consequence of this was that it became impossible to continue to operate all the historical parishes, and at the Synod of Leinster at Kilkenny in 1614, many were grouped. It was at this time that the Union Parish of Coolock was formed, combining the existing parishes, of widely differing size and population, of Raheny, Glasnevin, Clonturk (also known as Drumcondra), Santry, Clontarf, Killester, Artaine (or Tartaine) and Coolock itself. The distinct identity of the constituent parishes such as Raheny remained, at least to some degree, and there are references to them in documents over the centuries. The chief office of the new parishes was designated be "Parish Priest".

The old church site saw the building of a Church of Ireland church in 1609, the remains of whose successor can still be seen today.

Raheny remained part of the Union Parish of Coolock until 1829, and that article contains the general history of the Union. Notably, until 1859, Raheny had no Catholic place of worship, though mass was undoubtedly said in houses from time to time, and after 1689, there was a form of chapel at Coolock, accessible directly by a country lane.

In 1829, the Union Parish was redesignated as the Parish of Clontarf, and its general history continues in that article.

For many years, Raheny continued as a quiet constituent area, with local people mostly attending mass at Coolock chapel, and some at Clontarf. Then, in the 1850's, the parish priest secured land at the top of Main Street, and commenced collection of subscriptions for a new church there; contributions came from both Catholics and Protestants. A design was commissioned by the well-known architect Patrick Byrne, who also worked on a number of other churches, and the first stone of the newer St. Assam's Church was laid in 1859. The church was officially opened in 1864 by the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin, Dr. Cullen, and there are fuller details in the church article.

From 1879 to 1966

In 1879, following the death of the parish priest of the Union Parish of Clontarf in 1878, it was divided, and two new Unions created, one designated the Parish of Fairview, taking in the ancient parishes of Drumcondra, Glasnevin, Santry and Artaine, and a new Union Parish of Clontarf, comprising Clontarf, Raheny, Coolock and Killester.

On the death of the Parish Priest, Archdeacon O'Neill, in 1909, the parish was divided again, a new "Union of Coolock and Raheny" (including Killester, and with the chaplaincy of Artaine Industrial School attached) was erected, with the first parish priest of this entity being Patrick Doyle.

The Raheny National Schools complex was built between 1953 and 1958, replacing the older schools, except for Springdale National School.

On 29th March 1954, the Raheny Parish Committee under Union Parish Priest Fr. W.J. Fitzpatrick launched the "Raheny Newsletter", to keep locals appraised of the work of the committee and priests, and to discuss both local history and future planning. It was noted that the area then held 280 Catholic families (around 1200 people), that the new St. Anne's development would bring around 600 more households, and would be followed by Dublin Corporation work in Edenmore and Kilbarrack. It is not clear how long this newsletter survived.

In 1955, two new unions were formed, one comprising Raheny and Killester, the other being designated Coolock-Artane.

In the late 1950's, the Edenmore locality of Raheny began to develop as a new centre of population and in the 1960's, the parish developed schools and a church there.

In January 1960, the parish launched the memorable magazine "The Acorn", which documented its work and also a great deal of local history. An archive of the journal is held at Raheny Library.

From 1966 to the present

On 1st July 1966, Raheny and Killester reemerged as separate parishes, though somewhat changed from their old boundaries, and Edenmore was organised as a further parish, taking in some land from Coolock-Artane parish also.

Raheny was reduced in scale by the erection of Grange Park as a new parish in 1971 and in turn, Donaghmede parish was formed from the northern area of this in 1974. Later changes included the development of Foxfield-St. John (begun in 1971 from Bayside, itself a division of Kilbarrack from part of another large Union, which took in the ancient territories of Howth and Sutton, as well as Baldoyle, for which it was named) as a new parish, later renamed Kilbarrack-Foxfield.

In July 2007, Edenmore and Grange Park parishes were placed under a single Parish Priest.

The Parish today

Raheny today is an active parish, with around 10,000 members, one of the largest churches in the Diocese, two priests and a healthy financial situation. In addition to the parish church, it is supported by the order church at the Capuchin Friary on Station Road, and is home to groups from a number of religious orders (e.g. Poor Servants of the Mother of God, Daughters of the Holy Spirit, Holy Spirit Missionary Sisters).

The parish publishes a weekly newsletter on Saturday evening (since 1997), a children's newsletter, and supports the local Raheny News (the "Green Paper"), published each Sunday morning from around October to May for over thirty years.

In 2005, the current form of Parish Pastoral Council was launched, succeeding an older group which had launched many parish projects; it has the two clergy, 5 appointed members and 7 nominated from among parishioners. Associated groups work on liturgical matters, baptism, bereavement and visitation, and run the Parish Book and Newspaper Shops, and the Video Library. There is also a Parish Finance Committee. The operation of the church and services are supported by the Sacristan and Altar Servers, the Parish Choir, the Folk Group, the Flower-Arranging, Church Cleaning and Maintenance teams and the Organist.

There are many voluntary groups linked to the parish, from prayer groups to the local conference of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, local scouts and guides to the Legion of Mary, and there remain links to the local schools.

The Church has a cordial relationship with the neighbouring Church of Ireland parish, and the two have cooperated on such events as Parish Pilgrimages and Women's World Day of Prayer.

The Church of Our Lady, Mother of Divine Grace

The site of St. Assam's Well, a holy well from ancient times, a field known as "The Shrubbery", at the very centre of the developing village, used occasionally for games, had been bought in 1952 to provide for succession to the popular but overloaded St. Assam's Church of 1859. The first sod was turned on 3 May, 1959, and the foundation stone for the new Church of Our Lady, Mother of Divine Grace was blessed and laid by Archbishop J.C. McQuaid in the presence of Fr. Dr. Fitzpatrick. P.P. on April 24th 1960. On 22 July, 1962, the church was blessed, dedicated and opened, also by Archbishop J.C. McQuaid, with now Monsignor Dr. Fitzpatrick, Parish Priest, Vicar Forane and historian, and a substantial congregation. The Ceremony of Blessing and Dedication began at 11.30 and was followed by full High Mass at 12 noon. The new church immediately entered service, while for the next few years the surrounding grounds were completed, mostly by volunteers, and the car park prepared.

Priests

Parish Priests of the Union of the Parishes of Coolock, Clontarf, Raheny, Artaine, Killester, Clonturk, Santry and Glasnevin (Union of Coolock)

* Rev. James Drake, fl. 1620
* Rev. Richard Cahill, fl. 1680
* Rev. (Charles) Cormac Cassidy, fl. 1704?
* Rev. Nicholas Gernon, fl. 1720
* V. Rev. Andrew Canon Tuite, 1733-
* V. Rev. T. Canon McLoughlin, 1771-
* V. Rev. John Canon Larkin, 1785-
* V. Rev. Patrick Canon Ryan, 1797-
* V. Rev. Daniel Canon Murray, 1805
* V. Rev. Paul Long, 1805-

Parish Priests of the Union of the Parishes of Coolock, Clontarf, Raheny, Artaine, Killester, Clonturk, Santry and Glasnevin (Union of Clontarf)

* V. Rev. James Canon Callanan, 1829-
* V. Rev. Canon Cornelius E. Rooney, 1846, presided over the establishment of St. Assam's Church

Parish Priest of the Union of Coolock, Clontarf, Raheny, Artaine, Killester

* V. Rev. Patrick Archdeacon O'Neill, 1879

Parish Priests of the Union of Coolock, Raheny, Artane, Killester (Union Parish of Coolock)

* V. Rev. Patrick Doyle, 1909-
* V. Rev. James McCarroll, 1924-
* V. Rev. Thomas J. Graham, 1933
* V. Rev. Gregory Byrne, 1933-
* Right Rev. Mgr. William J. Fitzpatrick, V.F., D.D., 1950-

Parish Priests of the Union of Raheny and Killester

* Right Rev. Mgr. William J. Fitzpatrick, V.F. (then Vicar General, Archdiocese of Dublin), D.D., 1955-Administered the combined parishes in a time of massive housing development and oversaw their separation. As Vicar Forane for the Deanery, Mgr. Fitzpatrick did much of the work of developing the church in north Dublin and Fingal, with massive new housing needing churches and schools, and played the same role in expanded form as Vicar-General of the Diocese from 1961.

Parish Priests of Raheny

* Right Rev. Mgr. W. Fitzpatrick, V.G., D.D., 1966-1972, died 1972, first Parish Priest of Raheny alone for centuries. Buried by parish church
* Very Rev. Joseph O'Hare, D.D., 1972-1982, died 1982, buried by parish church
* Very Rev. John F. Canon McHale, 1982-1996, Canon of Tassagard, Pastor Emeritus 1996-2007, died 2007, buried by parish church
* Very Rev. Thomas Kearney 1996-2005, now curate at Whitehall-Larkhill
* Right Rev. Mgr. Martin O'Shea, 2005-

Curates of Raheny

* Rev. Kieran Foley, (appointed 1962) 1966
* Rev. John O'Connell, (appointed 1963), 1966-1972
* Rev. Francis McDonnell, (appointed 1965), 1966-1967
* Rev. Patrick Maloney, 1966-1967
* Rev. Christopher Hyland, 1966-1969
* Rev. Laurence Forrestal, 1967-1974
* Rev. Timothy Murphy, 1969-1973
* Rev. Donal Quill, 1969-1970
* Rev. Dermot O'Mahony, 1970-197
* Rev. Joseph Drumgoole 1973-1982, later Parish Priest of neighbouring Grange Park
* Rev. Cornelius O'Keefe 1973-1985
* Rev. Denis Ryan, 1974-1976
* Rev. John Jacob, 1976-1982
* Rev. Denis Laverty, 1976-1982
* Rev. Thomas Murphy, 1982-1985
* Rev. Desmond O'Sullivan, 1985-1995
* Rev. Patrick McHugh, 1986-1989
* Rev. Roy Connell, 1986-1991
* Rev. Gerard Condon, 1989-1990
* Rev. Philip McManus, 1990-2003
* Rev. Martin de Leeuw, OFM Cap., 1991-1992
* Rev. Kenneth Clarke, 1991-1995
* Rev. Paddy Dore, 1993-1997
* Rev. Michael Sullivan, 1995-1996
* Rev. John McNamara, 1995-2004
* Rev. Gerard Moore, July 2003-, from ordination

Deacons at Raheny

* Denis Robinson, April 2002 - June 2003

ources

* Dublin: Catholic Truth Society, 1915; Donnelly, N. (Canea, Bishop of); Short Histories of Dublin Parishes, Vol. XIV.
* Dublin: rahenyparish.org (History), recorded on 14 April 2005.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Parish of Coolock (Roman Catholic) — Founded in the early days of Irish Christian parish structures, the Parish of Coolock, today a mid size suburban community on the northside of Dublin, was for many years during penal times one of the few functioning Roman Catholic structures in… …   Wikipedia

  • Parish of Clontarf (Roman Catholic) — Founded in the early days of Irish Christian parish structures, the Parish of Clontarf assumed in 1829 the mantle of Union Parish for a large area of north Dublin, a role previously filled by the Parish of Coolock, into which Clontarf had been… …   Wikipedia

  • Parish of Raheny (Church of Ireland) — The Parish of Raheny is the modern successor in the Church of Ireland to an early (1152) parish, in Raheny, a district of Dublin reputed to be a site of Christian settlement back to 570. Today s parish comprises Raheny village and the wider… …   Wikipedia

  • Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin — The Archdiocese of Dublin (Irish: Ard Deoise Bhaile Átha Cliath ), also known as the See of Dublin, is the largest Roman Catholic diocese in Ireland, headed by the Archbishop of Dublin.JurisdictionThe archdiocese of Dublin covers all of County… …   Wikipedia

  • Raheny — Infobox Irish Place name = Raheny gaeilge = Rath Eanna (trad.), Rath Eanaigh (modern) map pin coords = left: 62px; top: 77px north coord = 53.3803 west coord = 6.17498 irish grid = area = 960 acres (Civil Parish, excluding sea) elevation =… …   Wikipedia

  • Parish of Coolock (Church of Ireland) — The Parish of Coolock in the Church of Ireland was one of two successors to the ancient parish of that name, the other being the ongoing Roman Catholic parish. Early yearsThe parish came into being sometime from 1536 on but the first clerical… …   Wikipedia

  • Church of Ireland Parish of Clontarf — The parish church of St John the Baptist, Seafield Road, Clontarf The Parish of St. John the Baptist, the Church of Ireland Parish of Clontarf, Dublin is a religious community located on the north shore of Dublin Bay, bounded by the Parishes of …   Wikipedia

  • Manor House School, Raheny — Manor House School is a large Roman Catholic second level all girls school in Raheny, Dublin, Ireland, attached to a convent, and with significant sporting facilities. The school has an enrolment of around 800 (2006). Contents 1 Location 2… …   Wikipedia

  • St. Assam's Church — St. Assam s is the name of two historic churches in the village of Raheny, Dublin, one a picturesque ruin in the middle of the village, one the structurally sound but no longer primary church built for the local Roman Catholic community of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Clontarf, Dublin — Clontarf Cluain Tarbh   Town   …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”