Clogher is home to the provincial office in Northern Ireland for the congregation of the Sisters of Mercy (Roman Catholic order of nuns). From 1971 to 1991 The Mercy Order employed some of their nuns at St Macartan's Primary School following the leave of the order of saint louis as the school was actually founded by the Sisters of St Louis in the 1930s due to the high demand for primary Catholic education in the Clogher area. The Sisters of Mercy also had ownership of the St Macartan's nursing and dementia care home until recent years where they decided to hand the nursing home over to the NHS. The sisters of Saint Louis left Clogher in the 1970s and the Mercy Order continued their work. However, In the late 1980s the Sisters of Mercy were phased out of the school and retired from the job of teaching at St Macartan's School due to falling numbers of nuns and as a newer curriculum had been introduced in Northern Ireland it meant they needed more qualifications. They have since severed most ties with the St Macartan's Convent School but still live in the Convent of Mercy on the Ballagh Road, Clogher, next to the St Macartan's nursing home. The name
Clochar refers to something made of stone ('cloch' is the Irish word for 'stone' and can be anglicised as 'cloch', 'clogh' or 'clough'); probably on the site of the
medieval monastery or a nearby
ringfort. Archaeological remains from before the 5th century have been found in the vicinity. The story goes that "Cloch-Ór (Golden Stone), may have been a ceremonial or oracle stone (see
Cenn Cruaich and
Omphalos) originally covered in gold
sacred to the
druids...given to
Mac Cairthinn by an old pagan noble (Cairpre, the father of St
Tigernach of Clones), who had harassed him in every possible way until the saint's patient love won the local ruler to the faith." Clogher has been a religious centre since
St. Patrick's time and likely before. St. Aedh
Mac Cairthinn of Clogher (c. 430–505 AD) an early disciple and companion of Saint Patrick founded a monastery at the site, which later the
Synod of Rathbreasail recognised as an episcopal see. The
Cathedral Church of Saint Macartan in the village is now one of two cathedrals of the
Church of Ireland diocese of Clogher; the other is at
Enniskillen. The
Roman Catholic Diocese of Clogher has its cathedral in
Monaghan. The meetinghouse of is outside the village in the townland of Carntall. The "
City of Clogher" was a
rotten borough in the
Parliament of Ireland in the gift of the Protestant bishop. The village also gives its name to the
Barony of Clogher, one of the original four
baronies of County Tyrone. ==Transport==