As of 2019, the cemetery at the church is overgrown and is not accessible to the public. It is owned by the Dublin city council, and community efforts are underway to revive the tradition of annual cleaning and decoration. After they were
hanged, drawn and quartered upon George's Hill outside the walls of Dublin in 1612, Bishop
Concobhar Ó Duibheannaigh and Fr.
Patrick O'Loughran of the illegal
Catholic Church in Ireland were secretly buried in St. James Churchyard, where their graves became a site of
Christian pilgrimage. Both were beatified by
Pope John Paul II, alongside 15 other
Irish Catholic Martyrs, in 1992. Their feast day is June 20. In the centre of the cemetery is the monument of Sir
Theobald Butler (1650-1720), of the Butlers of Ballyline, a prominent barrister who served as
Solicitor General for Ireland and assisted in framing the articles of the
Treaty of Limerick in 1691, and who advocated the
Roman Catholic cause before
Parliament. His monument has a Latin epitaph stating that it was erected by his eldest son "to the best of fathers." Since Butler was a Catholic, it is noteworthy that the Church of Ireland made no objection to his being buried in St. James'. The monument was restored by Colonel Augustus Butler D.L. of
County Clare, his descendant in the fourth generation, in 1876.
Sir Mark Rainsford, Mayor of Dublin and owner of the brewery which was sold to
Arthur Guinness, was buried in St James in 1709. Also buried here is
Sergeant-Major John Lucas,
VC, who died 4 March 1892 and
Sir William Haldane-Porter founder of the UK Immigration Service, who died in 1944.
Holy well and fountain Across the road from the church, in the middle of the road, is "The Fountain", an obelisk with 4 sundials with a drinking fountain at its base, built in the 1780s by
Charles Manners, 4th Duke of Rutland, the then
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. It was an old custom that funeral processions passing the fountain would circle it three times
sunwise before carrying on to the cemetery. The fountain is said to be located on the former site of one of the
holy wells of St. James which were a focus of the fair of St. James, the
pattern Sunday celebration for that saint.
History Although the present church only dates to the 18th century, there are records of burials as early as 1495 and it is believed that the cemetery may have been in use as early as the 13th century. Nicholas Carlisle's description of the St. James cemetery decoration tradition indicates that it was already considered an old one by 1828. ==Notable parishioners==