Bodenstown Graveyard (Irish: Reilig Bhaile Uí Bhuadáin) is a cemetery located in County Kildare, Republic of Ireland.[1] Containing a ruined medieval church, it is best known as the burial place of the Irish patriot Wolfe Tone (1763–1798).[2]

Bodenstown Graveyard
Church (east gable and south wall)
Map
Details
Establishedearly 14th century?
Location
Bodenstown, Sallins, County Kildare
CountryIreland
Coordinates53°15′58″N 6°39′55″W / 53.266124°N 6.665241°W / 53.266124; -6.665241
TypePublic
Size0.234 hectares (0.58 acres)
Find a GraveBodenstown Graveyard
View of the west wall of the church and the speaker's podium

History edit

 
Bronze profile of Wolfe Tone and excerpt from Patrick Pearse's 1915 eulogy at his graveside, installed 2013 on the north wall of the church

The stone church dates to before 1352, in which year it belonged to Great Connell Priory, and measures 12 m (39 ft) by 7 m (23 ft). It was described as being in good condition in 1612 but was ruined by the 19th century; all that remains are the west gable and north and south walls.[3][4]

Tone was buried next to his father at Bodenstown following his death in 1798. Semi-official commemorations are believed to have begun in the 1840s.[5] In "Tone's Grave", Thomas Davis describes his visit there c. 1843.[citation needed]

Pilgrimages to Wolfe Tone's graveside were first held in 1873, the 75th anniversary of his death. After gaps in the 1880s, they resumed in 1891, and have been held every year since, except in 1906–10 and 1921.[6] The ceremony, involving a march from Sallins railway station to the graveyard, took place on the Sunday closest to Tone's birthday, 20 June. Since 1922 there have been rival parades on different June Sundays due to schisms within Irish republicanism.[7][8]

In October 1969, the Tone's tomb was bombed and damaged by the Ulster loyalist UVF.[9] In June 1975, the same group sought to derail a train at near Sallins carrying 250 Official IRA supporters to the annual commemoration, and murdered a witness to their attempt, a local farm labourer, Christopher Phelan.[10][11] In 2013, the Tone's headstone was replaced with a tomb of Irish limestone and, overlooking it on a church wall, a bronze relief portraying Tone in profile next to an excerpt from Pearse's 1915 eulogy.[12]

There is one British Commonwealth war grave of the First World War, of Private Walter Duffy of the Leinster Regiment, who died on 7 July 1918.[13]

Notable burials edit

 
Wolfe Tone's grave

References edit

  1. ^ "Bodenstown Churchyard Cemetery – County Kildare, Ireland". www.interment.net.
  2. ^ "Grave of Wolfe Tone - County Songs".
  3. ^ Castlehunter (18 May 2017). "Ireland In Ruins: Old Bodenstown Church Co Kildare".
  4. ^ edmooneyphotography (10 September 2013). "Bodenstown Church & Cemetery".
  5. ^ "Annual Wolfetone Commemoration in Bodenstown! - Indymedia Ireland". www.indymedia.ie.
  6. ^ "Pilgrimages to Tone's grave at Bodenstown, 1873–1922: time, place, popularity". 27 April 2015.
  7. ^ "Processions to Remember Wolfe Tone". www.kildare.ie.
  8. ^ "Wolfe Tone Commemoration". RTÉ Archives.
  9. ^ "Unveiling at Tone's Grave". The Leinster Leader. 11 July 2013.
  10. ^ Sutton, Malcolm. "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths". cain.ulst.ac.uk.
  11. ^ "The Sunday World on the 1975 murder of Christy Phelan at Sallins, County Kildare". www.michael.donegan.care4free.net. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  12. ^ "Unveiling at Tone's Grave". The Leinster Leader. 11 July 2013.
  13. ^ "Bodenstown Old Graveyard, with list of casualties". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 7 February 2019.