The
Nethercross or Lowercross was carved in granite at St Canice's abbey sometime between the 7th and 9th centuries. The original height of the cross is not known as it was dismantled by the clergy during the
Cromwellian invasion of Ireland and hidden to prevent its desecration by the
Roundheads. In 1806, Rev. Robert Walsh was appointed curate of the
Church of Ireland parish of Finglas. Following his literary and antiquarian pursuits, he came to hear the story of the cross. He tracked down an old man whose grandfather, as a boy, had been present at the burial of the cross in a corner of one of the
glebe fields. Rev. Walsh unearthed the cross from its hiding place, as described by the old man, and had it erected in the south-east corner of the parish graveyard, where it now stands. Following its recovery (circa 1809 - 1816) and restoration, it now stands at more than two metres tall.). There are spiral designs on the underside of the cross. The cross was the northern boundary marker of the parish from early times at a place which is still called Watery Lanes, north of Mellows Road. ==See also==