Archives

The Little Round House Of Beginnings – Thurles Cathedral Of The Assumption.

  • A Roof to Save, A Night to Remember – Major New Fundraiser To Be Unveiled Soon.
  • Something Big Is Coming: Major New Fundraiser for Cathedral of the Assumption, Thurles – Set for Early May.

Almost every family in the Thurles area has at least one thread that leads back to Thurles Cathedral.
It might be the memory of a baptism carried in a shawl and whispered prayers. It might be First Communion photographs taken on the steps, Confirmation day nerves, or the steady comfort of familiar hymns sung from the choir. For others, it is the bright lift of a wedding morning and, sooner or later for us all, the quiet dignity of farewells; funerals, anniversaries, candles lit for names we still speak.

Thurles Cathedral Baptistery.

Thurles Cathedral isn’t just a landmark you pass on the way through Thurles town; no it is a place where lives are marked, where time is measured in sacred moments, and where the community’s joys and sorrows have been gathered and held for generations.

And then there’s the detail that catches you almost immediately as you approach from the street. To the right, slightly apart, like a gentle prologue before the main story, stands a circular building, modest in scale yet rich in meaning.

That round building is the baptistery; its separation from Thurles Cathedral is no accident, and it is one of the things that makes Thurles so quietly distinctive.
In Ireland, baptisteries are typically absorbed into the body of the church. Here in Thurles, it stands free, echoing the great continental tradition, where baptism, the beginning of the Christian journey, was given its own threshold-space; a place of welcome, entry, and promise, before you pass into the larger embrace of the Cathedral itself.

Stand for a moment, let the little round baptistery hold your gaze, and watch how stone and light conspire to make something quietly, heart-stoppingly beautiful.

Built in locally quarried limestone, the baptistery shares the Cathedral’s grounded, elemental strength; stone that feels native to its own landscape. Yet it totally refuses that tiresome, boring, and tedious lack of variety that results so often in dull routine. String courses and carved details break the grey with crisp definition, and in places lighter stone is introduced to lift the eye and relieve the broad limestone planes.

Then comes the architecture’s music; the repetition of arches. Below, a long, slender rhythm of limestone, pillars support lower arcade. Above, the upper arcade rests on a colonnade of stunted pillars in polished red Aberdeen granite, a sudden richness, a warmth of colour that feels almost like a flourish, as if the building has discovered ornament and decided to rejoice in it. Higher still, an upper wall, smaller in circumference than the lower, becomes more intricate, same richly decorated and pierced by twelve circular openings that read like little moons of daylight.

And naturally, the gaze rises again, to the dome, a crowning that seems to gather the whole circular form into a single upward gesture. At its summit sits the archiepiscopal cross with two arms, the sign that this Cathedral belongs to an archbishopric; not only a parish church, but a mother church with a wider symbolic reach.

All of which brings us to the urgent present.
Beauty like this depends on something deeply unromantic but absolutely essential, a sound roof. And right now, Thurles is seeking to re-roof the building and a major conservation step and fundraising is underway to make that possible. It is the sort of work that doesn’t make headlines the way a new project might, yet it is the work that decides whether what we love will endure; keeping out water, preventing slow damage, protecting artistry and memory alike.

In a way, it is fitting that the baptistery greets you first. A baptistery is about beginnings. And this moment is another beginning, too; the community’s chance to put its shoulder under the task, to protect what has protected so many of our milestones, and to ensure that the Cathedral remains not just admired, but kept.

A Gentle Call To Action.
If this place has ever held even one moment of your life; a prayer, a photograph, a hymn, a vow, a farewell, consider doing one small thing to help it hold those moments for the next family, and indeed the next.

A donation, a fundraiser, a share with someone who has moved away, but still carries Thurles in their heart, it all matters. Roofs are saved the way communities are built: not by one grand gesture, but by many hands doing what they can, when they can.

A major new fundraising event to support the re-roofing of the Cathedral of the Assumption, Thurles will be unveiled soon, with an early May 2026 date now in the diary.
Watch this space and be ready to help keep a roof over the place that has held so many of our life’s moments. Because some buildings are more than stone. They are memory made visible, and now, quite literally, the future of this one is “In Our Hands“.

Man In His 70s Dies In Single Vehicle Collision On R660 At Holycross, Tipperary.

Gardaí are appealing for witnesses, following a fatal road traffic collision at Holycross, Thurles, County Tipperary this afternoon.

Shortly after 2.15pm today Sunday, February 8th 2026, Gardaí and emergency services responded to a single-vehicle collision involving a car on the R660 at Holycross. The driver and sole occupant, a man in his 70s, was sadly pronounced deceased at the scene.

The man’s body has been removed to the mortuary at University Hospital Limerick, where a post-mortem examination will be carried out. The local Coroner has been notified.

A technical examination of the scene has been completed by Garda Forensic Collision Investigators, and the road has since fully reopened.

Appeal for witnesses and dash-cam footage.
Gardaí are appealing to anyone who witnessed the incident to come forward. Road users who may have camera footage, including dash-cam recordings, and who were travelling on the R660 at Holycross, Thurles, around the time of the collision are asked to make this footage available to investigating Gardaí.

Anyone with information is asked to contact Thurles Garda Station on Tel: (0504) 25100, the Garda Confidential Line on Tel: 1800 666 111, or indeed any Garda station.

Leinster House: €14.5m In Post-Election Payouts

A clear look at the figures as €14.5m is doled out in Leinster House post-election payouts.

More than €14.5 million has been paid out in severance-style supports, redundancy and pension lump sums to former TDs and Senators and their staff since last year’s election, according to figures released under FOI and explanatory notes from the Oireachtas.
The payments fall into two broad streams: supports for departing politicians and exit payments for staff employed under the Oireachtas scheme.

Leinster House.

Termination payments to former TDs and Senators:
The Oireachtas said €2.98 million was paid in monthly termination payments to politicians who retired or lost their seats. That money was shared among 70 people, working out at an average of about €41,800 per recipient.
These monthly payments are made to TDs and Senators who meet service requirements and are described as a measure intended to help members transition back into ordinary employment after leaving office.
Separately, a total of €1.14 million was paid in termination lump sums under the Oireachtas departure package. Again, this related to 70 former TDs and Senators, averaging around €16,000 each.

An information note accompanying the figures sets out the basic rule: where eligibility conditions are met, a termination lump sum equivalent to two months of salary, including salary allowances held during the period of continuous service, is payable, subject to Revenue rules on severance payments.

Pension lump sums and annual pensions:
In addition to termination supports, FOI figures show a further €3.022 million was paid in pension lump sums to retiring and departing TDs and Senators. This pot was shared among 22 people, an average of just over €137,000 per recipient.
Those individuals also qualified for annual pensions, with reported yearly amounts ranging from €7,796 to €63,467. Some may also be entitled to ministerial pensions, though those payments are handled through the Department of Finance rather than the Oireachtas administration.

One point highlighted in the reporting is transparency:
In previous years, names and individual amounts were published, but that practice has now ceased, with privacy cited as the reason.

Staff severance and redundancy: €7.45m:
A large share of the overall €14.5m relates to staff working for TDs and Senators, whose employment ended after the election.
Documents released under FOI show around €7.45 million was paid to staff members of former TDs and Senators. This included severance payments of €6.189 million paid to 187 people, an average of about €33,000 each.
A further €1.26 million was paid in statutory redundancy to 116 former staff, worth an average of just under €11,000 per recipient.
The records also show that nine people were re-employed after the election, triggering repayment requirements. The Oireachtas said €192,875 was repaid in severance by nine people, and one person additionally repaid €14,116 in redundancy.
The Oireachtas note explains that where someone who received an exit payment takes up employment under the scheme again within one year, they must repay the money received plus any compound interest that has accrued. It also states that where an exit payment has been repaid, any future payment or pension lump sum will be based on the person’s full service under the scheme.

What it means:
Supporters of these arrangements argue elections can bring abrupt job losses and that structured payments provide a buffer for both politicians and staff. Critics tend to focus on the overall cost and optics, particularly at a time when most workers outside politics rely on standard redundancy rules.

Either way, the FOI figures put a firm number on the post-election bill, and ensure the debate around value for money, transparency and reform is likely to continue.

A Song For A Sunday.

‘Why Me ?’

Lyrics and Vocals: American singer, Song writer, Musician and Actor the late Kris Kristofferson. (1936–2024).

The Late Kris Kristofferson.

Kris Kristofferson’s gospel-leaning country classic ‘Why Me ?’ feels less like a performance and more like a plainspoken prayer. Released as a single in March 1973 from the album “Jesus Was a Capricorn“, it became the biggest solo hit of his career, topping Billboard’s Hot Country Songs in July 1973.
Kristofferson later linked it to a moment at a church service when the preacher asked, ‘Is anybody feeling lost?’, and his hand went up. So, with that honesty at the heart of it, here’s ‘Why Me ?’.

‘Why Me ?’

Why me Lord, what have I ever done,
To deserve even one,
Of the pleasures I’ve known.
Tell me Lord, what did I ever do,
That was worth loving You,
Or the kindness You’ve shown.
Lord, help me Jesus, I’ve wasted it,
So help me Jesus, I know what I am,
But now that I know that I’ve needed You,
So Help me Jesus, my soul’s in Your hand.
Try me Lord, if You think there’s a way,
I can try to repay,
All I’ve taken from You.
Maybe Lord, I can show someone else,
What I’ve been through myself,
On my way back to You.
Lord, help me Jesus, I’ve wasted it,
So help me Jesus, I know what I am.
But now that I know that I’ve needed You,
So help me Jesus, my soul’s in Your hand.
Lord, help me Jesus, I’ve wasted it,
So help me Jesus, I know what I am.
But now that I know that I’ve needed You,
So help me Jesus, my soul’s in Your hand.
Jesus, my soul’s in Your hand.


END.

Death Of Billy Crowley, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

It was with great sadness that we learned of the death, yesterday Saturday 7th February 2026, of Mr Billy Crowley, St Martin’s, Monadreen, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

In his 90th year and pre-deceased by his parents Jack and Nora; Mr Crowley passed away peacefully, following a short illness.

His passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his sorrowing family; loving wife Mary (née Treacy), daughter Noreen, grandchildren Rachelle and Patrick, son-in-law PJ (Bowden), brothers-in-law, sister-in-law, nephews, nieces, cousins, extended relatives, neighbours and friends.

Requiescat in Pace.

Funeral Arrangements.

The earthly remains of Mr Crowley will repose at Hugh Ryan’s Funeral Home, Slievenamon Road, Thurles, (Eircode E41 CP59) on Monday afternoon, February 9th, from 5:00pm until 7:00pm, before his funeral cortège is received into the Cathedral of the Assumption, Cathedral Street, Thurles, (Eircode E41 A528), at 7:45pm, same evening.
Requiem Mass for Mr Crowley will be offered on Tuesday morning, February 10th at 11:00am, followed by interment immediately afterwards in St. Patrick’s Cemetery, Moyne Road, Lognafulla, Thurles, Co. Tupperary.

For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mr Crowley, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.

The extended Crowley and Treacy families wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.

Note Please: House strictly private.

Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam dílis.