Reg No
40402414
Rating
Regional
Categories of Special Interest
Architectural, Artistic, Historical, Social
Original Use
Church/chapel
In Use As
Church/chapel
Date
1925 - 1930
Coordinates
231428, 298931
Date Recorded
27/07/2012
Date Updated
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Freestanding Gothic Revival Roman Catholic church, built 1926, comprising seven-bay nave with gabled front facing north-west having breakfront surmounted by bellcote, lower chancel to south-east, double gable-fronted side porch to north-east of nave and corresponding double-gabled sacristy to south-west. Pitch slate roof, tall cut stone chimneystack to sacristry, sections of cast-iron rainwater goods, cut-stone fractable to front gable with pyramidal corner pinnacles with metal cross finials, oversailing verges to nave and chancel at south-east end. Squared random rubble limestone walls with granite cut-stone dressings. Rock-faced granite angle buttresses to corners of front gable and flanking breakfront surmounted by gablets, buttresses to nave and chancel terminating at eaves. Pointed arch main door opening with stepped and chamfered stone surround and hood moulding, west window over having reticulated tracery. Rock-faced granite pointed arch block-and-start openings to trefoil-headed lights with chamfered reveals and sills having hood mouldings and cut stone arch ring over. Quatrefoil oculus to chancel, three multiple-foil oculi over and flanking sacristy and side entrance porch roofs. Square-headed block-and-start openings to sacristry and side entrance porch. Stained glass to all windows. Sheeted timber doors with decorative iron hinges to all doors. Exposed timber hammer beam roof truss to interior. Glazed timber panelled internal porch. Carved timber gallery to entrance end. Pointed arcade with hood moulding on quatrefoil columns with high central arch delineating sanctuary in eastern bay. Pointed chancel arch with profiled moulding on corbels. Altars of concrete with marble facing. Site bounded by rubble stone walls with square-profile cut stone piers flanked by pedestrian gates in further piers, all having pyramidal capstones and wrought-iron gates. Church surrounded by graveyard to south and west with twentieth century grave markers. Calvary sculpture to north of church.
An early twentieth century church built in a robust Gothic Revival style to the design of W.H. Byrne & Son, an important architectural firm responsible for many Catholic church commissions at the time. The altars were designed by Edmund Sharpe of Dublin. The building replaced an earlier T-plan church of 1798, sited to the west within the same townland, near the penal mass rock of Drumyouth. It retains its original form, character, and fabric. The combination of the dark limestone with the lighter Newry-granite dressing achieves an interesting contrasting quality to the exterior. Built at cost of £12,230 by Felix O'Hare of Warrenpoint, the building displays the high standards of traditional craftsmanship employed into the early decades of the twentieth century. The gate piers and boundary wall enhance the grounds of the church which is set in a scenic location at the foot of Bruise Hill and makes a significant contribution to the character of the area and to the architectural heritage of the county.