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Kinsale
The
Carmelites in Kinsale – A Brief History
Throughout the centuries a number of events and happenings have
helped the Carmelite friars hone their ministry in Kinsale endeared them to the
people in the region to whom they minister. This still pertains to the present
community of four friars who continue the friary ministry.
In 1334 the local Earl, Robert Fitzrichard Balryain, entrusted St
Mary’s Abbey, which he had built along with adjoining portions of land, to the
Carmelite friars (whom he had probably met on his travels to the Crusades)
envisioning the establishment of suburban settlements for the native Irish.
From the Abbey in this period the Carmelites (Calced) were
associated with the care of the sick in the local leprosia and with the pastoral
and civil care of the local people inside and outside the town walls. They
continued to minister to the local people until the Suppression of the
Monasteries and the Battle of Kinsale in 1601.
Henry VIII suppressed the Abbey in 1543 after which time it was put
to many uses. One of the uses was housing for the friars whose ministry to the
people on the grounds of pastoral care was tolerated for a time. From 1567
onwards the property was leased to notable merchants and others. In 1601 the
Abbey walls were breached by English troops who were fleeing from Tyrone’s army
and wished to gain access to the town for ransacking.
Spanish Discalced Carmelite friars arrived in Kinsale in1633 and
claimed the Abbey as their Order’s heritage, restored the church and began
celebrating Mass for the people. One December day in 1641, a platoon of
English troops, wanting to gain entry to the town, bombarded the church during
Mass killing the celebrant and the congregation beneath the falling rubble. The
Discalced friars departed Kinsale in 1653.
After the Abbey’s sacking the people used to gathered at the nearby
Abbey Well for Rosary and prayer services. Nearby, at the junction of the Bandon
and Rock roads, the Carmelite friars (Calced) established a residence known as
“the olde Masshouse,” where they celebrated mass and, thus, the faith was
preserved.
Meanwhile the Carmelite friars – deemed ‘foreigners’ by law – were
allowed to engage in pastoral activity among the people. They roamed the
countryside sheltering in well-disposed and friendly locations and homesteads.
They stayed close to the people tending to their pastoral needs and celebrated
the Sacraments for them in locations which have become well-known landmarks.
They sheltered in caves and “safe” houses.
In May 1656, Cromwell’s forces ordered the 200 or so natives to
leave the town. They settled on a level tract between the
Rock Road and the Barrack Green
where they built shelters for themselves. The 1660 Act of Restoration allowed
the friars to re-enter the town and they raised an altar on this site for
celebrating
Mass. Through the good offices of William Galwey, the landlord, the friars were
able to obtain a site for their residence which was known as “ye olde Masshouse
on ye Rocke”.
The Act banishing Religious was reinforced in 1698 and the friars
vacated the masshouse and reverted to the open spaces, lodging once again in
friendly and well-disposed locations such as Ballintubber Woods and other well
known spots farther afield.
In these surroundings, Fr Tadhg O’Connell, O.Carm., an eminent
scholar and native of Kinsale, translated La Trompette du Ciel (Trompa
na bhflaitheas) and Misterios del Monte Calvario into Gaelic (Irish) for
the Gaelic speaking people as they lacked in their own mother tongue the
knowledge and the material for salvation. Many other friars risked life and limb
to minister spiritually to the people.
During the 1720s an air of tolerance towards Catholics prevailed
and allowed the friars to return to their residence on Rathmore Beg. They found
it difficult to rebuild their old residence – “the Masshouse.”
In 1730 Francis Kearney, a landlord from nearby Garrettstown,
offered the friars a site in the poorer section of the town among the weavers on
Lower Catholic Walk and just below their old residence. In 1735 the Friars built
a friary, a storehouse, a garden and a small church on the site. Fr Patrick
O’Mahoney, O.Carm. purchased the plot in 1737 and was appointed Prior in 1739.
An attempt was made in 1744 to imprison Fr O’Mahoney for owning land but he was
exonerated through
Kearney claiming ownership of the property. Later, in 1747, Fr O’Mahoney was
appointed Town Almoner.
The chapel was torched in 1786 by a group of inebriated soldiers
who ran amok and set fire to the thatched roof. It may have been restored by Fr
Lawrence Callanan, a Carmelite novice from nearby Killbrittain, who had walked
all the way from there to Kinsale to join the Carmelites. After study and
ordination on the continent, Fr Callanan became a well-known figure as he walked
the roads on pastoral calls and prayed in the gallery of the chapel.
In the 1840s Fr Callanan involved himself, along with Fr Lulum,
O.Carm., in the construction of the famine time friary church which was financed
with money which Fr Lulum collected in
England for that purpose and also to help the local Mercy Sisters in their food
relief fund.
In constructing a church the friars were able to provide
employment, create a cash flow to purchase food in the family circle and thereby
preserve human dignity in the area. The civil authorities embraced the same
principle in the construction of the Kinsale to Bandon road along by the World’s
End with the Famine Relief funds.
The church was built around the original chapel on the site. The
facade consists of cut limestone hewn in Kilnacloona quarry on the Ringrone bank
of the Bandon and ferried across the river to be hauled up to the friary
site. During the 1870s a pentagonal sanctuary was added to the building by Frs
Parr and Southwell. Fr Southwell was sent to South America
and may have contributed financial help towards the local Kinsale building
projects. In this period the interior of the church was plastered, a timber
ceiling and a timberwork gallery exhibiting all the skills of the local
shipbuilders. Each of the walls of the pentagon has a beautiful imported stained
glass window depicting a saint relevant to the worshippers’ orientation and
these surround a centerpiece depicting the scapular vision in its Carmelite
context.
The sanctuary area was modified in the 1960s by Fr L. Gallagher,
O.Carm. in harmony with the current liturgical reforms. Fr A. O’Reilly, O.Carm.
had the church renovated again in the 1980s while Frs B. O’Callaghan and S.
Hession had the stained glass windows repaired, restored and refired in 1998 by
Abbey Stained Glass Studio in Dublin.
The accolade – “....... planted in Carmel’s soil, He persevered in
prayer, fruitful in kindly deeds” ascribed to St Andrew Corsini, a fourteenth
century Carmelite, may also be ascribed to members of the Carmelite family
associated with the Kinsale foundation throughout the centuries.

Contacts:
Rev Fr
Prior, O.Carm.,
Carmelite
Friary,
Kinsale,
Co Cork.
Tel: 021
4772138.
Fax: 021 4777514
Email:
prior@carmeliteskinsale.com
Website:
www.carmeliteskinsale.com
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