
Thought to be the only example of an Irish Round Tower in the United States, the obscure Irish Round Tower in the St. Mary’s Catholic Cemetery in Milford, Massachusetts, stands as a piece of local history and an architectural landmark. The tower was envisioned by Father Patrick Cuddihy (1809-1898), the pastor of the St. Mary of the Assumption Catholic Church of Milford, who was born in County Tipperary, Ireland, and oversaw a largely Irish-born congregation here in the States. In 1893, Father Cuddihy sought to expand the existing St. Mary’s Cemetery which had been running out of space for the ever-growing Catholic population of Milford. For the cemetery, he envisioned an Irish Round Tower as a symbol of the Emerald Isle, his land of birth and that of most of his parishioners. Irish Round Towers were historically used in Ireland as bell towers, but for the cemetery in Milford, it would serve the purpose of beautification of the new grounds of the cemetery. Local workers began construction on the tower in 1894. Constructed of locally quarried Milford granite, the tower stands 73.5′ with a conical roof and walls two feet thick. The Milford tower is said to have been modeled after the tower on Devenish Island in Ireland and stands just 10 feet shorter than its inspiration.
(Thought I had commented previously). Interesting that this is thought to be the only example of an Irish Round Tower in the US. There is a round tower just southeast of Cooperstown NY that was said to have been fashioned by F Ambrose Clark (1886-1964) after a castle he had seen in Ireland. He used his tower as a hunting lodge. The trail to the tower is unmarked, but photos can be found online. Brose was a grandson of Edward Cabot Clark (a founding partner of the Singer Sewing Machine Company). Reportedly, he preferred to be buried there in upstate NY with his hunting dog (“Buttons”) and one of his steeplechase horses.
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I just looked up the example in NY, it is Kingfisher Tower, not a round tower but a stunning structure nonetheless! I need to explore New York more!
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