Fr. James Doyle, Parish Priest of Athy, is buried in St. Michael’s
Cemetery where his gravestone records that he was 64 years old when he passed
away on 10th November 1892.
He had served as a curate in Athy for 17 years and Parish Priest for 13
years. I have been unable to locate the
graves of six of his predecessors as Parish Priest of Athy, the seventh, Monsignor
Andrew Quinn having died some time after he transferred to Dun Laoghaire. The clerical career of his successor, Archdeacon
Germaine, is recorded on the latter’s gravestone in St. Michael’s Cemetery as, ‘1 year a curate in Dunlavin, 23 years a
curate in Castledermot, 15 years D.D. in Avoca’ before becoming Parish
Priest of Athy where he served for 12 years and where he died on 18th
April 1905 aged 78 years.
Canon Edward Mackey was the next Parish Priest to die in office and
his gravestone simply records ‘Edward
Canon Mackey, In days gone by, P.P. Athy 1909 – 1928’. Incidentally he died on 31st March
and not 21st March as mentioned in last week’s article. The whereabouts of the last resting place of
Fr. Fintan Carroll who succeeded Canon Mackey is not known to me. Fr. Carroll who transferred from Castledermot
to take over responsibility for the Parish of St. Michaels died unexpectedly in
May, just a few weeks after coming to Athy.
His was the shortest period as Parish Priest of any of the office
holders stretching back to 1670, while the distinction of having the longest
service belongs to Fr. Daniel Fitzpatrick, who, if records are accurate, served
as Parish Priest for 46 years.
Fr. Patrick McDonnell replaced the late Fr. Carroll on 11th
June 1928 and he remained as Parish Priest of St. Michaels until his death,
aged 84 years on 1st March 1956.
It is as Archdeacon McDonnell that he is remembered today by the older
residents. During the early part of his
ministry in Athy he had a disagreement with the members of Athy Urban District
Council over a remark made at a meeting of the Council when the Parish Priest
and one of his curates, Fr. Maurice Brown, were nominated to the Council’s
Library Committee. The remark was not
reported in the local press but nevertheless word got back to the Parish Priest
who refused to take up the Council’s nomination. The curate Fr. Brown who would later write a
number of highly regarded books while he was Parish Priest of Ballymore Eustace
felt compelled to follow the lead of his Parish Priest and so for a while the
town’s Library Committee operated without the services of the local clergy. Relationships between the local Church and
civic leaders were obviously fully restored by 1952 when on the proposal of
M.G. Nolan, seconded by P.L. Doyle, the Council agreed that its new housing
estate at Holland’s Field should be named McDonnell Drive ‘to mark the deep appreciation of the people of Athy of the invaluable
services rendered to the Parish by our beloved Parish Priest.’ It was a significant honour in view of the
fact that Archdeacon McDonnell had still another four years to live. When he died on 11th March 1956
the Archdeacon was remembered as ‘gentle,
unobtrusive, vain but not proud, easy of access and approach and very devoted
to the confessional and Mass.’
My own memories of the old priest, for whom I often served Mass on
one of the side altars, are coloured by my earliest contact with him. As a 7 or 8 year old I was in a class brought
by Sister Brendan to confessions at St. Michaels where one of the confessors that
school morning and occupying a temporary confessional specially fitted up for
him, was Archdeacon McDonnell. At one
stage during the confessions I forgot what I had to say, much to the annoyance
of the elderly cleric who pushed his walking stick around the barrier between
us and prodded me out of the confession box.
I never forgot or forgave and was always conscious of the disagreeable
and grumpy cleric whenever I had to serve his Mass in later years.
Parish Priests in the 1950s and earlier seemed to have been
fashioned from the same block, as his successor Fr. Vincent Steen who was
Parish Priest for 11 years until 1967 was to my young eyes another stern
authoritarian. By the time he left for a
Dublin parish on 26th January 1967 I had been out of Athy for six
years and another 15 years would pass before I returned.
In the meantime Fr. John Gunning replaced Fr. Steen and after four
years it was the turn of Fr. William Rogan to take over as Parish Priest. Fr. Gunning had transferred to St. Anthony’s
Clontarf and references to his time in Athy describe him as a priest ‘who endeared himself to the people he
served.’ Fr. Rogan remained in Athy
for nine years before transferring to another parish and he was replaced as
Parish Priest by Fr. Owen Sweeney who had been President of Clonliffe
College. His brief five years in charge
of St. Michael’s Parish was marked by an energy and a commitment to religious
and social development within the parish which made Fr. Sweeney one of the most
popular men to have held the position of Parish Priest in recent years.
Fr. Philip Dennehy, happily still with us, arrived in Athy as our
Parish Priest in June 1985 having previously served in the town as a curate for
ten years from 1963. He proved to be a
dedicated and inspiring Parish Priest, who having retired from the position
remains on in St. Michael’s to help out in the parish.
Monsignor John Wilson came to us in 2006 and transferred last month
to the Parish of Ballymore Eustace. His
replacement, Fr. Michael Murtagh, on his first Sunday introduced himself as a
Mayo man, a priest for 33 years whose first Parish was on the island of Inis Meáin
where he spent three years followed by a similar period in Letterfrack. Two years were next spent in Mulranny,
another Parish in the Tuam dioceses before he transferred to the concrete
jungle of city parishes in our capital city.
One of these Parishes was Killester, not too far from the Dublin Parish
where I lived for 12 years and stories of the Mayo football enthusiast and
priest have circulated far beyond the boundaries of Killester.
Fr. Michael played minor football for his native county and the
depth of his support for what in recent times has been the GAA’s most
persistently luckless All-Ireland finalists is understandable. The green and red of Mayo have featured on a
few occasions on the morning of All-Irelands at services in Killester Church,
while Fr. Michael officiated. I
particularly liked the story (believe me its true) where the Mayo curate
happily indulged by his Kerry-born Parish Priest bedecked a baby pram in the
Mayo colours on the morning of an All-Ireland final and pushed it up the aisle,
parking it to the side of the altar. At
an appropriate time during the sermon he called upon a parishioner to approach
the pram and open a large card which held up to the congregation read ‘Expecting SAM’. Unfortunately even the prayers and support of
the Killester parishioners were not sufficient to secure a Mayo victory over
Meath so that on the Sunday after Mayo was defeated the pram again made its
appearance, still bedecked in the Mayo colours and pushed up the aisle yet
again by Fr. Michael. This time when the
card was removed from the pram and held up it read, ‘miscarried’.
When I heard the story and some of the other escapades involving our
new Parish Priest I laughed heartily.
Fr. Michael Murtagh is as far removed from the stern authoritarian
Parish Priest of the past as is possible to imagine. The clerical austerity of 50 years ago and
more is hopefully about to give way to a happy and inclusive relationship
between parishioners and their Parish Priest.
Long may it be so.
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