| Clare County Library | Clare
History |
| Ordnance Survey Letters by John O'Donovan and Eugene Curry, 1839 |
Parish of Disert (b) |
The second arch was supported by a slender column of
stone at each side carved and surmounted by a human head; the column
on the east has disappeared. The third arch is supported by the angles
of the wall and the fourth by two slender columns like those already
mentioned, with heads also. The stones of this arch are nineteen in number
and project a little from the wall, presenting twelve human heads and
seven heads of some animals, the head on the key-stone being smaller
than any of the rest. I believe Mr. Petrie has a drawing of this door,
as I remember having seen it in the Penny Journal. (Not by Mr.
Petrie, and not accurate).
The choir arch is a beautiful circular one built with finely cut grit-stone, fourteen feet six and a half inches wide, and I should think the same in height. There is a double-headed curvilineal pointed belfry on this gable built with the very same kind of stone and workmanship. The wall around the choir arch appears to have been opening and threatening to fall out, but has been prevented by the timely interference of Mr. Synge, who some time ago, had it well plastered and staunched. There is a pointed window in the north wall of nave near this gable, seven feet seven inches by three feet ten inside and six feet two by nine inches outside. There is a window in the south side of quire near the east gable, built up with the same sort of stones as the choir arch, pointed inside, where it is six feet seven inches high and four feet four inches wide, round outside, where it is five feet two high and six inches wide. The window in the east gable is eleven feet two and a half inches wide and about fifteen feet high, divided into three compartments by two triangular pillars of masonry and lined all round with the same sort of cut stones as those in the choir arch, but looking somewhat fresher. These compartments are bluntly (flatly) pointed inside and circular in front. Tradition says that this choir was added to the Church by O’Dea, and the people here always call it O’Dea’s Chapel. Indeed, this tradition is favoured by the appearance of the walls and its being built up against, not part of, the middle gable, nor would I be able to discover any material difference between the masonry of this gable and the rest of the choir. There is a monumental stone inserted in the north wall of the choir,
having the
following inscription in plain letters:- There is a tombstone near the east gable with the following inscription on it: “Here lies the body of Honora Mc Namara, the wife of William Neylan, Esquire, and the body of Celia O’Brien the wife of Capt. Daniel Neylan. Celia died the 5th day of April, Anno Xti. 1728.” Those Neylans were located at Knock-na-Graige in the neighbouring Parish
of Rath, but are now extinct or dispersed. |