Church of St. John the Evangelist, Dublin

Church of St. John the Evangelist
Coordinates: 53°20′38″N 6°16′31″W / 53.34389°N 6.27528°W / 53.34389; -6.27528
Location Fishamble Street, Dublin
Country Ireland
Denomination Church of Ireland
History
Former name(s) St. John de Bothestret (1327)
Founded 1168
Founder(s) Giolla Michell
Dedication St. John the Evangelist
Architecture
Closed 1878
Demolished 1884
Administration
Province Province of Dublin

The Church of St. John the Evangelist was a former Church of Ireland church located on the west side of Fishamble Street in the centre of Dublin, Ireland. It was founded in the 12th century, and a great many of its parish records survive.

The Church

According to Sir John Gilbert the church was built in 1168 by a native Irishman called Giolla Michell.[1] It was then attached to the Church of the Most Holy Trinity (Christ Church), which was run by the Augustinian Order. Fishamble St. in those times reached only as far as the Music Hall, the rest, where the church was located, was called Bothestret. In the church there was a chapel to St. Mary and one to St. John, which was used by the Guild of Tailors.[2]

In the 14th century at Easter a Miracle Play, on the subject of the Resurrection, was performed in the church.[3]

An Arland Ussher (died 1557), nephew of the Mayor of Dublin, rebuilt the church. The new church consisted of a chancel, nave and two aisles. There were vaults underneath the church and a belfry contained three bells.[4]

The church was re-built in 1681. Its walls were only 24 feet (7.5 meters) high. There were 42 pews, which were shared among several families. The names Bladen, Hutchinson, Forster, Crumpe, Crossart, Thompson, Grimes, Reeves, Stacey and Shipley, among others, are recorded.

In the mid 18th-century a committee was formed to raise funds for yet another renovation of the church. They were successful in raising thousands of pounds from the government and smaller sums from other sources, so that the church was rebuilt and re-opened in 1773. The pews were auctioned to the highest bidders, providing those with the most money with the best seats. Alderman Robert Smith contributed funds to buy an organ, from William Gibson of Grafton St., but unfortunately it never worked properly.

The church was closed in 1878, after the parish was united with that of St. Werburgh. The pulpit and other pieces were taken to that church.

The churchyard

There was a graveyard attached to the church; the first tombstone mentioned is that of William Scriven, in 1681. Many titled people, aldermen, sheriffs, members of parliament, lawyers, clergy, lord mayors, and scholars were buried there. The last mentioned is that of Elizabeth Frances McAusland in 1850. It is estimated that there were more than 12,500 burials in total.[5]

The parish

The parish, which covered the area around the now closed Catholic church of St. Michael and John, was a union of two: St. John's and St. Olaf's. The latter, founded in the first half of the 11th century, commemorated Olaf I, King of Norway, and its church was located in what is present-day Essex St. The parishes were formally united in 1558.[6] The parish corresponded with the civil parish of St. John.

Notable parishioners

In 1748, Thomas Sheridan paid for a pew for the use of his players in the Smock Alley theatre.[7] In 1746, Henry Grattan was born nearby and baptised at this church.[8] The writer John Duncan Craig was curate here in the mid-1850s.

In 1818 Jeremiah John Moore was baptized here - in 1842 he migrated to Australia and opened the first bookshop in Sydney in George Street, opposite St Andrews Cathedral and the Town Hall.[9]

References and sources

Notes
  1. Gilbert (1854)
  2. Hughes, p. 18
  3. Ossory: Dublin Theatrics
  4. Hughes, p. 22
  5. Dublin's burial grounds and graveyards, by Vivien Igoe. Wolfhound, Dublin, 2001
  6. Hughes, p. 13
  7. Hughes, p. 28
  8. Ossory: Distinguished Dubliners
  9. ‘Cheap Reading for the People’: Jeremiah Moore and the New South Wales Book Trade, 1840-1883
Sources
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