Gardaí have launched an investigation to determine the cause of a Christmas Day fire which destroyed an historic cathedral in Longford.
Technical experts are to examine the scene of the fire at St Mel's Cathedral in which an estimated €2m worth of damaged after the building was gutted just a few hours after midnight Mass had been celebrated.
Flames almost 60 feet high were seen coming from the roof of the cathedral as several fire brigade units battled for hours to bring the blaze under control.
Bishop of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise Colm O’Reilly said the cathedral had been burned to a shell after fire ripped through it from end to end.
“It’s destroyed,” the distraught bishop said. “It’s the kind of nightmare that you never thought you would ever suffer, you have to say.
“I suppose the only thing you can compare it to is a big bereavement, a serious bereavement, and I’d say that feeling is shared by Longford people, by the priestly Diocese and by lay people but particularly of Longford.”
No one was injured in the fire.
Building work on the cathedral, a flagship church in the midlands, began in the 1840s. The foundation stone was laid by Dr Higgins, the Bishop of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise on May 19 1840 and completed on September 29 1856 by the Right Rev John Kilduff, his successor.
Completion of the cathedral was delayed by about 10 years because of the famine.
The consecration took place on May 19 1893, the 53rd anniversary of the laying of the foundation stone, in memory of St Mel, a missionary who travelled to Ireland with his uncle St Patrick.