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In 1591 the parish was reported as being vacant.
But in 1615 there was not only a rector, Robert Wilson, but also a curate,
Thaddeus McDonnell. Sadly, the church was described as being in a ruinous
state of repair. The value of the living was only £5 per annum. By contrast,
twenty years later the value of the living had risen to £30 p.a.. Towards
the end of the century money was being raised to build a new church.
There was no rectory and a house was rented for that purpose.
When Bishop Downes undertook his tour of the parishes
in 1699 and 1700 he described the region as "very coarse country". The
vicar of Fanlobbus travelled out from Dunmanway once a month to preach,
and another local clergyman came on another Sunday in the month. The
Bishop described the church as "in repair, only some of the slates are
off".
It is not certain when the new church was finally
built, but a record from 1837 states that the church which could hold
about 180 persons had been built about 50 years previously. At that
time the gross population of Drimoleague was noted as 4,870 and it was
estimated that the Protestant population was somewhere over 400.
Clearly
the new church did not impress, for in 1856 three parishioners granted
a half acre of land at Butlersgift as a site for yet another new church.
Two years later, on Friday, 10th September, 1858, the this church was
dedicated in the name of Saint Matthew. At this time there was still
no rectory, but by 1887 a new Glebe House had been built to the south
of the village, this despite the fact that the church population had
dropped to 300. There were two church schools in the parish - one at
Meenies with 21 children and the other at Claddagh with 40 children
on the roll.
The parish was united with Caheragh to the south
until recent years when it has become part of the Fanlobbus Union of
Parishes.
Our Sunday congregation varies between twenty-five
and forty.
Sunday services are held each week. On the first
three Sundays of the month the service is at 12.15 p.m. and on the fourth
Sunday qt 9.45 a.m. On the third Sunday of the month there is a celebration
of Holy Communion, with Morning Prayer on the other Sundays. A Sunday
school meets during the service on the second and fourth Sundays. The
children begin the service in church with their families, and then after
the scripture readings, they go out for their own Ministry of the Word.
They explore the Sunday readings through a mixture of play, craft, drama
and discussion. They return to be with their families for the end of
the service.
When there is a fifth Sunday in the month the churches
of the Union take it in turns to host a United Service.
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