

A short distance to the west of the ruins of Aghadoe Cathedral, County Kerry stands the now-disused Church of Ireland church. Work on the building, designed by an unknown architect, began in 1837, the land on which it stands being given by Charles Winn-Allanson, second Lord Headley who during the previous decade had built a new residence nearby. Lord Headley’s somewhat eccentric and spendthrift successors to the title have featured here before (see From Kerry to Mecca « The Irish Aesthete) but he seems to have been a model landlord, his death in 1840 much lamented in the area. Surviving him by more than 20 years, his widow Anne did much to relieve the suffering of local tenants during the years of the Great Famine and after. The large Headley tomb behind the church appropriately carries the words ‘Buried But Not Forgotten.’ The church ceased to be used for services in 1989 and now stands looking rather desolate in the midst of the graveyard.

