Parishes

Enniskillen


The Very Revd Kenneth Hall
 St. Macartin's Rectory, 13 Church Street, Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh. BT74 7DW
 Email: dean@clogher.anglican.org
 Website: www.enniskillencathedral.com

 

Curate Assistant: The Revd Dr Edwin Aiken and OLM: The Revd Colin Brownsmith

St Macartin's Cathedral Office
 St Macartin's Cathedral Hall, Hall's Lane, Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh. BT74 7DR
 Tel: 028 66 322917
 Email: stmacartins@btopenworld.com


The Dean and Chapter of the Cathedral Church of St. Macartan, Clogher and the Cathedral Church of St. Macartin, Enniskillen

Dean: Very Revd K.R.J. Hall (2010)
Archdeacon: Ven B. J. Harper (2016)
Precentor: Revd Precentor T.K. Hanlon (2019)
Chancellor: Revd Chancellor I.T.H. Berry (2019)

Prebendaries
Kilskeery: Vacant
Donacavey: Revd Canon P. Thompson (2019)
Tullycorbet: Revd Canon M.A. Armstrong (2012)
Tyholland: Vacant
Devenish: Vacant

Canons
Revd Canon A.D. Irwin (2019)
Revd Canon E.G.McM. Thompson (2019)

Canon representing the diocese in St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin
Vacant

Bishop's Chaplain
Revd S.C. Ajuka

 

St Macartin's Cathedral, Enniskillen
St Macartin's Cathedral, Enniskillen

Organ 1 Organ 2 Organ 3

Dates for your Diary:

December 2024

Tuesday 10th December – Enniskillen Cathedral Choir Christmas Concert at 8.00pm in St Macartin’s Cathedral. All are welcome.

Thursday 19th December – Dean of Clogher's Sit Out for Charity outside St. Macartin's Cathedral, Enniskillen from 9.00am to 9.00pm for charities including; Bishops’ Appeal; Air Ambulance NI and St. Macartin's Outreach Fund.

January 2025

Monday 13th January - Saturday 8th February 2025 – The Longest Yarn exhibition opens in St Macartin’s Cathedral, Enniskillen, the only venue in Ireland. The Longest Yarn is a three-dimensional wool tapestry, knitted and crocheted by hundreds of volunteers worldwide. Created with guidance from historians, retained by the project, to be historically accurate, each scene has been selected by the creator to depict the D-Day Landings 80 years ago, measuring 80 metres (265 feet) and represents the 80 years and 80 days since D-Day and the 80 days it took for the Allies to liberate Paris. The Longest Yarn tells the momentous story of June 6, from the build-up and launch in England through the Normandy invasion. It started in Normandy and is now travelling through cathedrals in England.