It’s a place I visit on a regular basis because my entire birth family are up there, they have a beautiful view. I’ve never strayed far beyond my family’s plot. I go up there to talk to my brother, sister and Da. The mammy is a whole different post in a different sub but, anyway.

    This particular graveyard has quite a large number of relocated folk. The original graveyard would have been where the Blessington lakes are now. It’s not a natural lake. It was created to provide water as the country progressed. The land was sized by compulsory sale and people were forcibly removed as the water came to their knees in their homes.

    The graveyard was relocated to a field donated by a farmer and the removal of the remains commenced. There’s a story of a young girl whose coffin broke when the lifted it and she was still the same as the day she was buried. Word spread about the girl that must be a saint. The graveyard was on boggy ground and the bog water had preserved the body.

    I’m a regular visitor since ‘13 when my younger brother died (fuck cancer). Got more regular as the rest of them passed but, I never strayed further than my family plot. Yesterday I did and it’s beautiful and deeply moving walking through the first burials. Some are nothing more than a deliberately placed lump of granite. Some are so badly weathered that you can see there was an engraving at some time in history but can’t make out. There is a few that I recognise the surname from the parish and people are still placing flowers for family the could have never known.

    https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1t3yef6

    Posted by AnyDamnThingWillDo

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    4 Comments

    1. I’m not quite sure what to say. You speak so eloquently in such an Irish way about it. I hope you have a very pleasant life.

    2. EliteDinoPasta on

      Thank you for not only providing those fantastic photos, but also talking about why the location’s so important to you as well. That fifth photo in particular is absolutely stunning, I could easily see that being a book cover.

    3. box_of_carrots on

      It’s important for us to remember and honour our dead. Your post has reminded me to go visit my Nana’s and grandfather’s grave in [Grangegorman](https://heritageireland.ie/places-to-visit/grangegorman-military-cemetery). My Nana was a wonderful person who would read us scéalta na Fíanna at bedtime. My grandfather died young before I was born most likely due to health issues. He was in the RDF and was injured in WWI and spent the war in atrocious conditions in a German POW camp.