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Kilcaskan
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The majority of the parish of Kilcaskan was in County Cork; see this page.
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"KILCASKAN, a parish in the baronies of Bear and Glanarought, counties Cork and Kerry, province of Munster, Ireland, 10 miles E.N.E. of Castletown-Bearhaven, its post town. This parish is 16 miles long by 8 broad. A considerable portion of the surface lies on the N.W. shore of Bantry Bay. It is a mountainous and wild district, containing the summits of Hungry Hill, Esk, and Ghoul. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Ross, value £285, in the patronage of the bishop. The church was built in 1810 by the late Board of First Fruits. There are two Roman Catholic chapels, also eight private schools. There are police and coastguard stations in the parish. The Lodge is the seat of the Earl of Bantry. There are ruins of a church situated among the hills; also of a fort at Drumlane. Slate, iron, and copper are worked."
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Feaghna Graveyard, Gurranes |
The 1901 and 1911 censuses have been digitised and made available online by the National Archives of Ireland.
Feaghna Graveyard, Gurranes |
St Fiachtna, Bonane, Catholic |
The ancient parish church and burial ground was in the portion of the parish in County Cork near the modern village of Adrigole.
In the Roman Catholic church the area forms part of the parish of Glengarriff. There have been chapels of ease at Bonane in the Kerry portion of Kilcaskan since the eighteenth century. The current church dedicated to St Fiachtna, dates from 1892.
A new church was built for the Established Church / Church of Ireland at Glengarriff in County Cork in 1863 but has since been abandoned.
The transcription of the section for this parish from the National Gazetteer (1868), provided by Colin Hinson.
- Ask for a calculation of the distance from Kilcaskan to another place.
You can see maps centred on OSI grid reference V9317262794 (Lat/Lon: 51.807765, -9.54958), Kilcaskan which are provided by:
- OpenStreetMap
- Google Maps
- Bing (was Multimap)
- Copy
Kilcaskan
and paste it along with the county name into the search box at Ordnance Survey Ireland. - GeoHack (Links to on-line maps and location specific services.)
- All places within the same township/parish shown on an Openstreetmap map.
- Nearby townships/parishes shown on an Openstreetmap map.
- Nearby places shown on an Openstreetmap map.