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J. J. McCarthy



 
 
James Joseph McCarthy (1817-1882) was an Irish
Ireland

Ireland is the List of islands by area in Europe, and the twentieth-largest island in the world. It lies to the north-west of continental Europe and is surrounded by hundreds of islands and islet....
 architect
Architect

An architect is trained and licenced in planning and designing buildings, and participates in supervising the construction of a building. Etymologically, architect derives from the Latin architectus, itself derived from the Greek arkhitekton , i.e....
, often referred to as the 'Irish Pugin
Pugin

Pugin most commonly refers to Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin , English architect and designer.Other members of his family include:* Augustus Charles Pugin , his French-born father, an artist and architectural draughtsman...
'.

s Joseph McCarthy was born in Dublin
Dublin

Dublin is both the largest city and capital of Republic of Ireland. It is located near the midpoint of Ireland's east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey and at the centre of the Dublin Region....
 on 6 January 1817, son of Charles McCarthy who came of a County Kerry
County Kerry

County Kerry is a southwestern county in Republic of Ireland. Informally referred to as The Kingdom, it forms part of the provinces of Ireland of Munster....
 family settled in Dublin.

The family circumstances seem to have been humble. McCarthy entered the Christian Brothers
Congregation of Christian Brothers

The Congregation of Christian Brothers is a world-wide community of religious brothers within the Roman Catholic Church, founded by Beatification Edmund Ignatius Rice....
 O'Connell School, North Richmond St., Dublin when it opened on 11 July 1831.

In the autumn of 1834 he was admitted to the Figure and Ornament Schools of the Royal Dublin Society
Royal Dublin Society

The RDS , or Cumann R?oga Bhaile ?tha Cliath in Irish language, was founded on 25 June 1731 to "to promote and develop agriculture, arts, industry, and science in Ireland"....
, in Kildare St.






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James Joseph McCarthy (1817-1882) was an Irish
Ireland

Ireland is the List of islands by area in Europe, and the twentieth-largest island in the world. It lies to the north-west of continental Europe and is surrounded by hundreds of islands and islet....
 architect
Architect

An architect is trained and licenced in planning and designing buildings, and participates in supervising the construction of a building. Etymologically, architect derives from the Latin architectus, itself derived from the Greek arkhitekton , i.e....
, often referred to as the 'Irish Pugin
Pugin

Pugin most commonly refers to Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin , English architect and designer.Other members of his family include:* Augustus Charles Pugin , his French-born father, an artist and architectural draughtsman...
'.

Early years

James Joseph McCarthy was born in Dublin
Dublin

Dublin is both the largest city and capital of Republic of Ireland. It is located near the midpoint of Ireland's east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey and at the centre of the Dublin Region....
 on 6 January 1817, son of Charles McCarthy who came of a County Kerry
County Kerry

County Kerry is a southwestern county in Republic of Ireland. Informally referred to as The Kingdom, it forms part of the provinces of Ireland of Munster....
 family settled in Dublin.

The family circumstances seem to have been humble. McCarthy entered the Christian Brothers
Congregation of Christian Brothers

The Congregation of Christian Brothers is a world-wide community of religious brothers within the Roman Catholic Church, founded by Beatification Edmund Ignatius Rice....
 O'Connell School, North Richmond St., Dublin when it opened on 11 July 1831.

In the autumn of 1834 he was admitted to the Figure and Ornament Schools of the Royal Dublin Society
Royal Dublin Society

The RDS , or Cumann R?oga Bhaile ?tha Cliath in Irish language, was founded on 25 June 1731 to "to promote and develop agriculture, arts, industry, and science in Ireland"....
, in Kildare St. The Schools had been founded in the late 18th century, and their objects included the training of artisans and the improvement of the quality of craftsmanship, though most painters and sculptors got their training there too, and so did many young architects, before going on to be articled to someone established in the profession. McCarthy moved from the Figure and Ornament Schools to the Architecture School.

Career

He served his aprenticeship with Williams Farrell. In 1837 his work was first shown at the annual exhibition of the Royal Hibernian Academy
Royal Hibernian Academy

The Royal Hibernian Academy is an artist based and artist oriented institution in Ireland. Its first elected president was the landscape painter, William Ashford....
 (RHA). He continued to send designs to the RHA for the next few years.

The only building with which his name is connected at this early stage is St. Columb's Church Derry
Derry

Derry or Londonderry , often called the Maiden City, is a City status in the United Kingdom in Northern Ireland....
. His next important work was St. Kevin's at Glendalough
Glendalough

Glendalough is a Valley#Glacial valleys located in County Wicklow, Republic of Ireland, renowned for its Early Middle Ages monastic settlement founded in the 6th century by Kevin of Glendalough, a hermit priest, and destroyed in 1398 in Ireland by English troops....
, Co. Wicklow - foundation stone laid 3 June 1846. McCarthy's second great triumph in 1846 was to win the competition for a design for a new church at Ballinasloe
Ballinasloe

Ballinasloe is a town in the eastern extremity of County Galway in Republic of Ireland.The town developed as a crossing point on the River Suck, a tributary of the River Shannon....
, Co. Galway. Unfortunately, this project was interrupted by the Famine, and when it was revived, the designs had been revised apparently by Pugin. So his next major work was the church at Kilskyre, Co. Meath, which was begun in 1847. It is in the Middle Pointed style.

In the late 40's McCarthy was consolidating his position as the man who would bring about a revival of ancient architecture in Ireland, and build churches in the true ecclesiological style.

A major event in McCarthy's career was the foundation of the Irish Ecclesiological Society in 1849. He was one of the three joint honorary secretaries (the other two were Rev. Bartholomew Woodlock, Vice-President of All Hallows College, and William Nugent Skeelly, Esq.) and, it would seem, one of the moving spirits of the society.

McCarthy was a very talented architect. At his best, particularly in smaller country churches, he skilfully adapted his chosen varieties of Gothic
Gothic architecture

Gothic architecture is a style of architecture which flourished during the high and late Middle Ages. It evolved from Romanesque architecture and was succeeded by Renaissance architecture....
 or Romanesque
Romanesque architecture

Romanesque architecture is the term that is used to describe the architecture of Middle Ages Europe which evolved into the Gothic architecture style beginning in the 12th century....
 to the needs of the building and to local material, and produced edifices which were solid and unpretentious, with clear, coherent, spatial relationships. His professional success was by no means undeserved. He was lucky in coming to maturity just when the Catholic Church in Ireland was entering a period of intense activity - he was lucky to combine the qualities of piety and patriotism which suited the mood of the time; he possessed the most important attribute for an architect of the period - he was an able administrator.

Works

St. Paul's Convent of Mercy, Belfast
Belfast

Belfast is the capital city of Northern Ireland and the seat of Devolution#United Kingdom Northern Ireland Executive and legislative Northern Ireland Assembly in Northern Ireland....
 (1855 - 1859); His only Belfast commission. Four ranges round central cloister. Three-storied facade with projecting gables giving a pronounced vertical feeling. Built of red brick with blue brick relieving arches and sandstone dressings.

Convent of Mercy, Kilrush
Kilrush

Kilrush is a coastal town in County Clare, Republic of Ireland. It is located near the mouth of the River Shannon in the south-west of the county....
 Co. Clare (1854); One of McCarthy's most concentrated designs, impressively sited on the edge of a valley, with the chapel on the 1st floor approached by elaborate twin doors of an arched landing. Massive chimneys and steep roofs reveal influence of Pugin's Maynooth, as also the paned, sashed and trefoil-headed windows. Designed in 1854 and built in 1860.

Convent of Mercy, Enniskillen
Enniskillen

Enniskillen is the county town in County Fermanagh. It is located almost exactly in the centre of the county between the Upper and Lower sections of Lough Erne....
, Co. Fermanagh (1850's); Original scheme was drawn up by McCarthy but what was built in a comfortable but outdated Georgian
Georgian architecture

Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking world to the set of architectural styles current between 1720 and 1840. It is eponymous for the first four Monarchy of the United Kingdom of the House of Hanover—George I of Great Britain, George II of Great Britain, George III of the United Kingdom, and George IV of the...
 has never been attributed to him.

88, Merrion Row, Dublin (1859); House built in his Romanesque idiom with bay windows on the side facade to take advantage of the lawn in front of the National Gallery.

All Hallows, Drumcondra, Dublin (1853); The Early Georgian house was extended to the rear by McCarthy with his characteristic institutional Gothic that advances forward to terminate in an almost free-standing collegiate chapel, designed by George Ashlin
George Ashlin

George Coppinger Ashlin was an Ireland architect, particularly noted for his work on churches and cathedrals....
, his rival, in 1876. Facade dominated by large rose window now filled with stained glass
Stained glass

For the Blackford Oakes novel, see Stained Glass The term stained glass can refer to the material of coloured glass or the craft of working with it....
 by Evie Hone (1953). Fittings by Ashlin.

Holy Cross Church and College, Drumcondra, Dublin; This church was commissioned by Cardinal Cullen, who commanded McCarthy to build in the Roman idiom. All long-living Gothic Revivalists who worked for the Catholic church had to at some point in their career sublimate their personal beliefs. In Ireland, McCarthy was the most successful because his sublimation was so wholehearted: his Roman precentents for the church of St. Agata dei Goti and St. Francesca Romano in the Forum. The restraint of the flat, coffered ceiling recreates Rome's early Christian architecture, if less so since the removal of some of Gagliardi wall paintings, victims of the Irish damp.

Entrance, Offices, and Chapel (1870-8), Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin; This church marks the closest he ever came to Celtic Revival. An eastern apse, a transept, an attached campanile and stained glass by Clayton and Bell militate against its Gaelicism.

Passionist Monastery and church, Harold’s Cross, Dublin (1862); An austere monastic block with adjoining tower. Round-headed window within set into Gothic relieving arches. There is no evidence today of the problems that he had with his builder and his clients, but all was forgiven when he was called back a few years later to add the church, admittedly using a dictated Italian Romanesque, in deference to the origins of the Passionist
Passionist

Passionists are a Roman Catholic religious order that was founded by St Paul of the Cross . Its expanded name is The Congregation of Discalced Clerks of the Most Holy Cross and Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ....
 order. Externally the church has twin towers and a profusion of sculpture by James Pearse.

Dominican Priory, Tallaght, Dublin (1863); Gothic Revival monastery. Chapel added in 1866 after his death by George Ashlin
George Ashlin

George Coppinger Ashlin was an Ireland architect, particularly noted for his work on churches and cathedrals....
.

St. Ignatius
St. Ignatius

St. Ignatius may refer to:...
’, Galway
Galway

Galway is the fourth largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the only city in the province of Connacht in Republic of Ireland. The city is located on the west coast of Ireland....
 (1860); The Jesuit church of the city, designed in 1863 by S.U. Roberts, in collaboration with his contractor, John Semple Jnr (1812/3-1880), son of the more celebrated Early Gothic Revivalist. They were probably executing the 1860 designs of McCarthy. Facade made asymmetrical by off-centre spire. Cruciform interior with open roof.

Franciscan Abbey, Killarney
Killarney

Killarney is a town in County Kerry, southwestern Republic of Ireland. The town is located north of the MacGillicuddy Reeks, on the northeastern shore of the Lakes of Killarney which are part of Killarney National Park....
 (1868); Monastic complex built round central cloister, prominently sited at the southern approach to the town. Asymmetrical facade flush with the west front of the church, all built with green hued rubble stone and contrasting dressings, inspired by Pugin's treatment of Enniscorthy Cathedral. Continuous nave and chancel with light lattice vault.

Presentation Convent, Tralee
Tralee

Tralee is the county town of County Kerry, in the southwest corner of Republic of Ireland. The name Tralee comes from the Irish 'Tr? L?', or 'Tr? Laoi', which means 'strand of the Lee' , although some believe it comes from the Irish 'Tr? Liath' meaning 'grey strand'....
, Co. Kerry; Built round two courtyards with polychromatic stonework to match adjoining Catholic
Catholic

Catholic is an adjective derived from the Greek language adjective , meaning "whole" or "complete". In the context of Christianity ecclesiology, it has a rich history and several usages....
 church.

Church of Ireland Chapel Kilkea,Co. Kildare
Kildare

Kildare is a town in County Kildare, Republic of Ireland. Its population of 7,538 makes it the seventh largest town in Kildare and the 55th largest in the Republic of Ireland, with a growth rate of 32.4pc since the 2002 census....
 (1863); McCarthy was an unexpected choice by the 4th Duke of Leinster
Leinster

Leinster , one of the Provinces of Ireland, lies in the east of Ireland and comprises the counties of County Carlow, County Dublin, County Kildare, County Kilkenny, County Laois, County Longford, County Louth, County Meath, County Offaly, County Westmeath, County Wexford and County Wicklow....
 for this little church in the model village at his gates. His original drawings which have survived are the only evidence of this unpublicised commission. His church is reserved with no outward evidence that this is a ducal chapel. Entry gained under western tower to a simple cell with whitewashed walls in contrast to the grey limestone tracery of the windows. Open roof braced with timber Gothic arches. The Triple lancet window
Lancet window

A lancet window is a tall narrow window with a pointed arch at its top It acquired the "lancet" name from its resemblance to a lance. Instances of this architectural Motif are most often found in Gothic architecture and ecclesiastical structures, where they are often placed singularly or in pairs....
 over altar, was later filled with stained glass
Stained glass

For the Blackford Oakes novel, see Stained Glass The term stained glass can refer to the material of coloured glass or the craft of working with it....
 by A.E. Child commemorating the Fitzgerald
FitzGerald

The surname FitzGerald is a translation of the Norman language fils de G?rald, or son of Gerald . Variant spellings include Fitz-Gerald and the modern Fitzgerald....
s.

Rectory, Kilkea (1865); Having completed the church, McCarthy was asked to design the rectory. Restrained Victorian
Victorian architecture

The term Victorian architecture can refer to one of a number of architectural styles predominantly employed during the Victorian era. As with the latter, the period of building that it covers may slightly overlap the actual reign, 20 June 1837 ? 22 January 1901, of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom after whom it is named....
, with minimal use of Gothic detail, it is now a private home.

St. Patrick’s College Chapel, Maynooth(1875); Started by McCarthy in 1875. By adding the chevet he departed from Pugin's more austere design to avoid coonfrontation with the litigious E.W. Pugin. He also designed the Senior Infirmary, but his scheme for completing Pugin's quad with a great hall was set aside. McCarthy's interior contains woodcarving, paintings, gilding and stained glass. Archbishop Healy's centenary volume of 1895 omits the identification of all the artists who worked under William Hague in the completion of McCarthy's interior after a limited competition. The paintings were executed by Cox and Buckley of Youghal, the stained glass is by Franz Mayer & Co. of Munich, and the mosaics are by Ludwig Oppenheimer
Ludwig Oppenheimer

Ludwig Oppenheimer was a mosaic artist. He worked on several major projects in Ireland: The Dublin Museum ; Cobh Cathedral ; The exaltation of the Holy Cross, Charleville, County Cork ; Sts Augustine and John, Thomas Street, Dublin ; Newry Cathedral ; Redemptorist Church, Limerick ; Sts....
. Hague's vast white marble altar was replaced in alabaster by George Ashlin
George Ashlin

George Coppinger Ashlin was an Ireland architect, particularly noted for his work on churches and cathedrals....
 in 1908.

Cahirmoyle House, Ardagh
Ardagh

Ardagh may refer to several villages in Ireland:* Ardagh, County Donegal* Ardagh, County Longford* Ardagh, County Limerick, where the Ardagh Chalice was found...
 Co. Limerick
Limerick

Limerick is the third largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the county seat of County Limerick in the province of Munster, in the midwest of Republic of Ireland....
; McCarthy's more important country-house commission. The house was constructed round a double-arcaded staircase hall, upheld by his characteristically over-scaled arcades with marble shafts and richly sculpted capitals. The principal rooms have polychromatic marble fireplaces and delicately pained ceilings. The client, a son of the patriot William Smith O'Brien and a descendant of the high kings, dictated Hiberno-Romanesque as his choice of style.

Croom House, Croom, Co. Limerick
Limerick

Limerick is the third largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the county seat of County Limerick in the province of Munster, in the midwest of Republic of Ireland....
;

Castle Forbes,Newtownforbes, Co. Longford
Longford

Longford is the county town of County Longford in the Midlands of Ireland. According to the 2006 census, the town has a population of around 13,000....
; The 7th Earl of Granard, after his marriage to the heiress of Johnstown Castle, Co. Wexford, and his conversion to Catholicism, commissioned McCarthy to remodel the stable block in Irish Baronial.

Christian Brothers
Congregation of Christian Brothers

The Congregation of Christian Brothers is a world-wide community of religious brothers within the Roman Catholic Church, founded by Beatification Edmund Ignatius Rice....
, Chapel St.,Dundalk
Dundalk

Dundalk is the county town of County Louth in Republic of Ireland, situated close to the border with Northern Ireland. It takes its name from , Dalga's Fortification home closely associated with the famous mythical warrior C?chulainn, and was granted its charter in 1189....
(1853-1869. Gothic institution built from 1853 to 1869 and ascribed to McCarthy.

Catholic Cathedrals


St Patrick's Cathedral, Armagh(1853); The first architect was Thomas Duff
Thomas Duff

Thomas John Duff was an Ireland architect from the town of Newry, County Down. Duff was the principle architect of a number of Roman Catholic churches and cathedrals in the northeast of Ireland....
 of Newry and he intended to recall 16th century Gothic. This was started in 1840 but was halted by the Famine. It was resumed in 1853 to the design of McCarthy who changed the idiom to 14th century. This was completed some 20 years later.

St Peter and St Paul Cathedral, Ennis(1860's); McCarthy designed the high altar, chapels of the Sacred Heart
Sacred Heart

The Sacred Heart is a religious devotion to Jesus's physical heart as the representation of the divine love for humanity.This devotion is predominantly used in the Roman Catholic Church, and also in strains of the Anglican Church and some Lutheran Churches....
 and the Blessed Virgin Mary
Blessed Virgin Mary

The Blessed Virgin Mary, sometimes shortened to The Blessed Virgin or The Virgin Mary, is a traditional title used by most Christians and most specifically used by liturgical Christians such as Roman Catholics, Anglicanism, Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholics, and some others to describe Mary, mother of Jesus, the mother of...
, the tower and the spire. Cathedral designed by Dominic Madden.

Killarney Cathedral St. Mary's (1853); The Irish masterpiece of Augustus Welby Pugin (A.W.N.). Pugin died in September 1852. Construction of the cathedral resumed at the beginning of 1853, and McCarthy, a friend and colleague of Pugin, succeeded him as architect. On 22 August 1855 it was consecrated and dedicated to the Assumption of Mary
Assumption of Mary

The Roman Catholic Church teaches as Dogma that the Mary , "having completed the course of her earthly life, was assumed body and soul into heavenly glory." This means that Mary was transported into Heaven with her body and soul united....
 in the presence of McCarthy and E.W. Pugin, the architect's eldest son.

St. Eugene’s Cathedral, Derry (1851); Yet another Irish cathedral that embodies the involuntary combination of McCarthy and George Ashlin
George Ashlin

George Coppinger Ashlin was an Ireland architect, particularly noted for his work on churches and cathedrals....
: indeed they alternated for over half a century. McCarthy replaced an incompetent unknown in 1851 and completed the nave and choir (there are no transepts) twenty years later, apart from the furnishing. The adjoining bishop's palace is also McCarthy (1873)

St. Macartan’s Cathedral, Monaghan,1861); The most impressive of McCarthy's cathedrals, at least until its internal remodelling in the 1980s. Started in 1861, the shell was competed by 1868. After McCarthy's death in 1882 William Hague took over, designing the spire and the gate lodge.

The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Cathedral, Thurles
Thurles

Thurles is a town in County Tipperary, Republic of Ireland, situated on the River Suir, with a population of around 8,000. It is twinned with Bollington in England and Salt Lake City, Utah, United States....
, Co.Tipperary
Tipperary

Tipperary is the name of a town in the south-west of County Tipperary, Republic of Ireland . The name "Tipperary" is derived from a well in the townland of Glenbane in the parish of Lattin and Cullen where the river "Arra" rises....
. (1865); The only Romanesque cathedral designed by McCarthy who started construction in 1865. Ten years later, his patron, Archbishop Leahy, died, to be succeeded by Archbishop Croke, who replaced McCarthy with his most formidable rival, George Ashlin. By then there was little left to do, but it must have been infuriating for McCarthy all the same. The exterior is entirely McCarthy's design.

St, Aidan’s Cathedral, Enniscorthy
Enniscorthy

Enniscorthy is the second-largest town in County Wexford, Republic of Ireland . With a history going back to 465 in Ireland, Enniscorthy is one of the longest continuously-occupied sites in Ireland....
, Co. Wexford
Wexford

Wexford is the county town of County Wexford in Republic of Ireland. It is situated near the south-eastern tip of Ireland, close to Rosslare Europort....
, Begun by A.W.N. Pugin in 1843, it is modelled on the English Tintern Abbey. The interior of the cathedral was completed by 1861 under the supervision of McCarthy. The arcades and piers, the panelled ceiling and the organ gallery at the west end are the his work, as were the altars and reredos.

Catholic churches



St. Mary’s Mallow, Co. Cork - marble wall memorial;

Ballyshannon, Co. Donegal - Polygonal chancel added by McCarthy in 1860;

St. Mary of the Angels, Dublin (1868-1881); Designed by McCarthy and built for the Capuchin Order. The architecture of the facade reverts to the austerity of his early rural churches. The interior was originally a simple timber-sheathed barrel-vault springing from coving through which the arches of the clerestory windows penetrated. Altars by James Pearse, facade statues by Leo Broe. When McCarthy died the Capuchins chose Ashlin to add the side aisle and the organ gallery.

St. Saviour’s, Dominic St., Dublin(1852); The finest of McCarthy's Dublin churches, at least until its internal reorganisation. The foundation stone was laid in 1852 and the dedication took place in 1861, but the projected tower was never started. The interior has been devastated by a recent re-ordering.

St. Catherine’s, Meath St., Dublin(1852); Gothic Revival church designed by McCarthy. The side elevations with their perforated buttresses and trefoiled aisle windows above the stone-roofed aisles are more indicative of the interior than the desiccated facade with its unfinished tower. Excellent glass in the style of O'Connor. William McBrides's painting above the chancel depicts St. Catherine
St. Catherine

St. Catherine may refer to:...
's martyrdom.

St. Mary's, Haddington Road, Dublin;

St. Mary Star of the Sea, Sandymount, Dublin, (1851-8); The triple-gabled facade expresses the internal layout of the nave and aisles all of equal width; an example of Pugin's influence on the early work of McCarthy. Dark atmospheric interior with stained glass by Earley. Church bell ringing across the strand heard by Gertie McDonnell in Ulysses (novel)
Ulysses (novel)

Ulysses is a novel by James Joyce, first serialized in parts in the American journal The Little Review from March 1918 to December 1920, then published in its entirety by Sylvia Beach on February 2, 1922, in Paris....
.

St. Michael's, Dun Laoghaire, Co. Dublin;

St. Michael’s, Ballinasloe, Co. Galway; Commission from McCarthy in 1846 and built in 1852-8 (showing little evidence of A.W.N. Pugin who was called in by the parish priest). The church as built was repudiated by McCarthy - a harsh design of local limestone with asymmetrical steeple. Interior is more interesting for its mural decorations by Joshue Clarke, its stained glass (St. Rose and St. Patrick) by Harry Clarke
Harry Clarke

Harry Clarke was an Ireland stained glass artist and book illustrator. Born in Dublin, he was a figure in the Irish Arts and Crafts Movement....
, who also designed a canvas of the Trinity
Trinity

In Christianity doctrine, the Trinity is the unity of God the Father, God the Son, and Holy Spirit as three persons in monotheism. The doctrine states that God is the Triune God, existing as three persons, or in the Greek hypostasis , but one being....
 above the chancel arch (1924). The altar sculpted by Albert Power contains an extraordinary Celtic Revival tabernacle by Mia Cranwell.

St. Brendan’s, Ardfert, Co. Kerry (1853-5); Both of McCarthy's parents came from Kerry and he received an abundance of commissions in that county. Ardfert church should not be confused with the nearby Sacred Heart church of Kilmoyley (1871) by Ashlin. Puginian Gothic with nave and smaller chancel propped up by their respective aisles. Corner tower and spire beside the entry porch. Interior stripped of plaster in the 1970s, when the altar that had replaced the original by Hardman in 1917 was in turn superseded.

St. Vincent, Ballyferriter, Co. Kerry; Designed by McCarthy c. 1865 and built out of local freestone with nave and lean-to aisles. Interior modernised.

St. Mary’s, Lispole
Lispole

Lispole is a village in County Kerry in Republic of Ireland. It is situated 5 miles from Daingean U? Ch?is and 25 miles from Tralee on the Dingle Peninsula on the N86 road National Secondary Route....
, Dingle
, Co. Kerry; Well-sited Gothic Revival church designed c. 1860, a twin to Feries. Built from local limestone with central nave held between low-roofed aisles. Diagonally placed bellcote corbelled out of buttresses from the corner of the facade. Interior altered by the insertion of skylights and the removal of the high altar designed by H. O'Neill and carved by Scannell in 1870.

Church of St. Gertrude, Feries (Firies), Co. Kerry; A twin of Lispole church, with a similar geometrical bellcote diagonally corbelled out of the buttresses of the facade, is proof that McCarthy had the ability to be as harsh and incisive as his comtemporary Church of Ireland architects.

St. Agatha, Glenfesk, Co. Kerry; Small Gothic Revival church built out of local stone, sited at the start of a mountain pass from Kerry to Cork. Tower never completed.

St. Michael’s, Lixnaw
Lixnaw

Lixnaw is a village in North County Kerry, Republic of Ireland. It is located near the River Brick SW of Listowel and NE of Tralee....
, Co. Kerry; One of the Celtic Revival
Celtic Revival

Celtic Revival covers a variety of movements and trends, mostly in the 19th and 20th centuries, which drew on Celtic art and traditions. Although the revival was complex and multifaceted, occurring across many fields and in variety of North Western Countries, its best known incarnation is probably the Irish Literary Revival also called...
 experiments by McCarthy, but predictably more Norman
Norman architecture

The term Norman architecture is used to categorise styles of Romanesque architecture developed by the Normans in the various lands under their dominion or influence in the 11th and 12th centuries....
 than Celt
Celt

Celts , is a modern term used to describe any of the European peoples who spoke, or speak, a Celtic languages. The term is also used in a wider sense to describe the Modern Celts of those peoples, notably those who participate in a Celtic culture....
ic, due to having to flank the nave with aisles that open off it through robust round arched arcades. Modernised interior.

St. John's, Tralee, Co. Kerry (1854-61); One of the most attractive of McCarthy's churches. It gives an impressive vista on entering of continuous nave and choir. Exterior dominated by George Ashlin's western tower and spire (1886-70) built from local sandstone with silver limestone dressings. Immense stained glass sanctuary window (and windows north and south adjoining the high altar) by Michael O'Connor.

SS Mary and Laurence, Ballintore, Co. Kildare; Rare attempt by McCarthy to create a national style by building a rural church in Hiberno-Romanesque, started c.1860. Features include heavy arcading, apse subdivided into four and metal strutting from roof.

St. Patrick’s Celbridge, Co. Kildare, (1857); Gothic Revival church. Central high-pitched nave held in place by steeple-raked aisle roofs, internally visible through arches whose loftiness contrasts with the stubby piers and compressed clerestory. Glass by Hardman and Wailes above the altar. Pained chancel. Original pulpit.

St. Coca, Kilcock, Co. Kildare; Built in 1868 in his Puginian manner - quatrefoil clerestory with steeply raked roofs over the aisles. The vertical uplift of the facade is cut short by the failure to build the extended tower.

Sacred Heart and St. Brigid, Kilcullen, Co. Kildare, (1869); Typical Puginian Gothic designed for Canon Langan. The stained glass of the lady chapel depicts a model of the church with the steeple that was never built. The interior has open timber roof with restless metal struts, supported on arcades of red marble columns with over-sculpted capitals. The chancel apse is subdivided into four bays, with neo-medieval glass.

Our Lady and St. David, Naas, Co. Kildare; Attributed to Thomas Cobden. McCarthy was called in 1875 to add the majestic tower and spire.This should read 1851 -- tower began 1851, completed 1858. See Church of Our Lady & St. David, Naas, Yearbook, 1954.

Taghadoe Church, Co. Kildare; Austere Gothic Revival designed by McCarthy in 1859-63. Asymmetrical steeple set flush with west facade. Altar carved by Purdy.

St. Mary, Thomastown, Co. Kilkenny; Built c.1859-62 to replace an earlier church of which the tower survives, competing with McCarthy's own belfry, a round tower embedded into the transept of the church. McCarthy achieved real rather than fictional authenticity by reusing the altar of Jerpoint, but this has now vanished.

St. Senan's, Foynes, Co. Limerick; McCarthy's most incisive design with a simple cell of four bays, and a projecting porch resting on tiny coupled red marble columns. The west facade has the same contrast of scale - an immense rose window and a tiny corner turret enclosing the staircase to the organ loft. His transept, chancel and central tower were never built.

SS Peter and Paul, Kilmallock, Co. Limerick, (1878); One of his later churches, simple in plan, with organ loft, nave and chancel beneath one continuous roof contrasting with off-centre tower and spire. The second-last bay of the aisles is carried upwards to make small transepts screened from the nave. There is sumptuous interior carving and decoration, despite the present altar's being made up out of its predecessor's debris. Here the central pinnacle has been retained as a freestanding tabernacle and a pair of dislodged marble angels stand guard on either side, above a window inspired by the ruined Dominican church of the town. Venetian mosaics in the chancel, under direction of Ashlin, glass by Mayer and Earley.

St. Mary’s, Rathkeale, Co. Limerick (1876); Designed by McCarthy, the church was started in 1876 and the spire completed by 1881. The interior ranks as one of his most impressive, where he achieves a sense of spaciousness by carrying the nave arcades across the transepts. He uses the same device between the transepts and the loftier side chapels that flank the chancel; these are treated asymmetrically. Red marble columns and good neo-medieval glass. Altar dismantled to conform with outdated liturgical thinking of the 1960s, but regurgitated as table, lectern and seat. In the porch beneath the tower a large plaque records the donors, including the architect, who donated the stained glass of the last window of the south aisle embellished by his heraldic devices.

St. Columb’s, Derry; Earliest recorded commission of McCarthy who built this church in 1838 as a single cell with a steeple symmetrically placed. Transepts added in 1887.

St. Mary’s, Ardee, Co. Louth; Gothic galleried church built c. 1930 and remodelled in 1860 by McCarthy, who inserted a series of elaborate altars beneath stained glass at the eastern end. Abandoned c.1965 and replaced by a new church across the road that looks like an elegant community centre. Impractical plans to turn the original church into a community centre remain stillborn.

St. Patrick’s Dundalk, Co Louth; Designed by Thomas Duff in 1860. McCarthy was commissioned to design the high altar, reredos, sedilia and a monument to the Rev. Coyne carved by R. Kirk.

St. Alphonsus Liguori, Kilskyre, Co. Meath; One of the earliest and finest of McCarthy's rural churches, designed when he was most under the spell of Pugin's Gothic. Started in 1849, completed in 1854, spire added in 1887.

St. Joseph, Carrickmacross, Co. Monaghan;

St. Mary Kilronan, Keadue, Co. Roscommon; In September 1860 it was announced that this church was to be built, and that the foundation stone had been laid. The architects were named as McCarthy and O'Connell. It had been announced that McCarthy and Daniel O'Connell, grandson of the Liberator, had entered into partnership. In 1863 when the building was well under way, McCarthy alone was named as architect. The plan comprised the usual nave and chancel, aisles, side chapels, south porch, with double bellcotes on the west gable of the nave, supported by the receding arch. Style was Early Decorated Gothic, the materials red sandstone with white limestone dressings.

St. Mary, Clogheen, Co. Tipperary; Gothic Revival church designed by McCarthy and built in 1862-4 in his austere manner. Powerful open-roof structure framing vista to reredos beneath triple lancet. Unusual Celtic Revival memorial cross at the gates.

Church of the Immaculate Conception, Killenaule, Co. Tipperary; Designed in 1861 by McCarthy as one of his most impressive churches, especially when viewed up an immense flight of steps from the humble street below. Roof steeply pitched over the nave clasped by low lean-to aisles. The facade is articulated with such vertical force that the adjoining belfry designed by McCarthy was never attempted. Open braced roof inside with long lancets filled with stained glass.

Holy Trinity, Cookstown, Co. Tyrone (1855-60); Simple but effective example of McCarthy's Gothic, where nothing distracts from the soaring tower and spire, symmetrically sited at the west end. A nave of five bays leads to a reduced chancel with one of McCarthy's oversized altars, still reasonably intact. However, his pulpit and lectern have been dismantled and the organ sold out of the west gallery beneath the tower.

St. Patrick’s, Dungannon, Co. Tyrone, (1867); Designed by McCarthy and completed by his son C.J. McCarthy in 1889, to whom is due the massive Caen stone pinnacled reredos that has so far survived liturgical agitation. The central shrine rises up between two windows surmounted by a rose. Exterior dominated by an off-centre belfry almost 200ft. high. The style is 'French Gothic of the 13th century' and the building material 'the fine warm-coloured yellow sandstone of the district' . This has been very roughly dressed for the outside walls, which, in combination with the quantity of ornament and carved detail, makes for a very fussy appearance.

Holy Cross, Tramore, Co. Waterford; Characteristic Gothic church dominated by asymmetrical tower and spire (1856-71). Interior stripped of its fittings and painted a pink that clashes with Franz Mayer & Co. glass.

St. Mary’s, Athlone, Co. Westmeath;

Church Courtown, Co. Wexford; Designed by McCarthy, and posthumously executed in 1932 by his son, C.J. McCarthy. Influenced by the nearby Church of Ireland, Ardamine, which was built by Street 20 years before. He used red brick with stone trimmings and also a western bellcote, but asymmetrically positioned and braced by flying buttresses. Stained glass by Earley.

Church of the Assumption, Wexford;

Our Lady of Mercy, Blessington, Co. Wicklow; Characteristic Gothic built in Wicklow granite in 1857-61. Consecrated by Archbishop Cullen to Mary, Mother of Mercy, the subject of its stained glass in the east window.

St. Kevin’s Glendalough, Co. Wicklow; Gothic Revival church, early example of his work, built in 1846-9. Convincing materialisation of the Puginian village church. Belfry omitted in favour of western bellcote.

St. Mary and St. Michael, Rathdrum, Co. Wicklow; Designed by McCarthy in early 1856 and dedicated in 1861, in his usual Gothic, built out of sturdy Wicklow granite. Nave, aisle and shallow chancel. Tributes of Pugin are the granite lychgate, and the asymmetrical painting of the ceiling of the aisle chapels, one predominantly red, the other predominantly blue. Stained glass by Franz Mayer & Co.. Romantic restoration that has stripped off internal plaster. Favourite church of Archbishop John Charles McQuaid
John Charles McQuaid

John Charles McQuaid, CSSp was Catholic Archbishop of Dublin and Primate of Ireland between December 1940 and February 1972.John Charles McQuaid was born in Cootehill, County Cavan in 1895....
.

Attributed to:

St. Michael’s, Ballsbridge,

Bishop’s Palace and Diocesan College, Killarney

St. Joseph’s Hall, Kilcock,

Ballylongford
Ballylongford

Ballylongford is a village near Listowel in north County Kerry, Ireland....
 Church,

Corrig Church

Bibliography

  • Jeanne Sheehy, J. J. McCarthy and the Gothic Revival, Ulster Architectural Heritage Society, 1977


  • Jeremy Williams, A Companion Guide to Architecture in Ireland, 1937-1921, Irish Academic Press, 1994.