Author Topic: RC parish church Cobh, County Cork  (Read 3101 times)

Offline maisie666

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RC parish church Cobh, County Cork
« on: Monday 01 August 11 18:56 BST (UK) »
Hello there

Could anyone let me know the name of the RC parish church for Cobh, County Cork, before St Colman's Cathedral was built?

Many thanks
Maisie

Offline ftcorkmdb

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Re: RC parish church Cobh, County Cork
« Reply #1 on: Wednesday 03 August 11 01:16 BST (UK) »
At the time St Colman's was being built (mainly 1868-79) Catholic churches were generally referred to as 'chapels'.  The town of 'Cove' was renamed 'Queenstown' in 1849, so the Catholic parish edifice would have been called by one and all  'Cove chapel' or 'Queenstown chapel'.  Except in larger towns with more than one Catholic church, the RC place of worship is not normally called by the locals by the name of the saint it is dedicated to, and it is possible that only a local historian would remember what saint was honored in the case of the chapel at Cove/Queenstown.  Catholic 'chapels' were not always substantial buildings, or in use for many years, and a new chapel replacing an older one might be located at some distance from the former building and be dedicated to an entirely different saint.   

Offline bulgaria71

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Re: RC parish church Cobh, County Cork
« Reply #2 on: Thursday 25 August 11 16:20 BST (UK) »
The museum Queenstown Experience has a page on Facebook and they may be able to find out the name of the original parish church for you or else suggest where to ask.

Offline jojo5

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Re: RC parish church Cobh, County Cork
« Reply #3 on: Tuesday 30 August 11 12:41 BST (UK) »
Hi......Here is some info for you....

The History of St. Colman's Cathedral

The Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Colman in Cobh is a large, elaborately detailed neo-Gothic building. It is prominently sited overlooking Cork harbour and visible for quite a distance. Local people are generally very proud of it and tourists often climb the steep hill to admire and photograph it. The historian Emmet Larkin has called it "the most ambitious building project undertaken by the Church in nineteenth-century Ireland", and Frederick O'Dwyer states that it was "certainly the most costly Irish ecclesiastical building of the Victorian era".

Facts about the Cathedral's Construction
Style of Architecture   Early French decorated gothic: example of gothic revival in 19 century
Architects   E.W. Pugin, G.C. Ashlin and T.A. Coleman
Clerk of Works   Charles Guilfoyle Doran
Period of building   1868-1915: 47 years
Foundations stone laid   September 30, 1868, by Bishop W. Keane
First Mass in Cathedral   June 15 1879 by Bishop J. McCarthy
Cathedral roofed   1879
Building of spire   Last of major external building works. Completed in March 1915
Ground Plan   Latin cross with long arm extending from east to west
In 1868, when the Cathedral was begun, Cobh or Queenstown as it was then called, was a relatively prosperous place. This was because it was Ireland's principal emigration outlet. More than five million people emigrated from Ireland in the nineteenth century - mainly to the United States, Australia and Canada and a large proportion of them left from Queenstown. The town's existing Roman Catholic Church which was constructed in 1808 and added to afterwards, began to seem inadequate. A meeting of the Queenstown parishioners was therefore called in January 1858, and the following resolution was passed:

Considering the very insufficient and in several respects unsatisfactory accommodation which our present parish church is capable of affording; and considering also the rising importance and increasing respectability of this town, it is incumbent on us as Catholics who revere our religion and are anxious to see it respected to provide a more suitable Church for the celebration of the Divine Worship.

By 1864 it had been decided that the proposed building would function not only as a parish church but as a cathedral for the Diocese of Cloyne. The original thirteenth century cathedral of the diocese, situated in the small east Cork town of Cloyne, was owned by the Church of Ireland. Queenstown, as the largest town in the diocese, seemed a better location for the Roman Catholic Cathedral. The building would be dedicated to the diocesan founder, St. Colman (522 - 600).

The old church was demolished, and construction of the new building was begun in February 1868. The preparatory work was difficult and expensive; the widening of the roadway on the seaward side required the construction of a "high, long, and thick wall of solid mason work" and because the foundations were dug from steeply sloping rock, "it was necessary in some parts to sink 24 feet below the level of the future floor of the church, while in other parts a firm bottom was found at a depth of only 4 feet". The first sod of the foundations was turned on 25 April 1868 and the foundation stone was laid on 15 July 1868. The foundations were completed by June 1869.

Hope This Helps...

Regards....jojo5