Rathgormack or Rathgormac[1] (Irish: Ráth Ó gCormaic, meaning 'Cormac's ringfort')[2] is a village and parish in northern County Waterford, Ireland.
The village has a pub, a shop, a newly made all-weather pitch, a recreational park, a national school[3] and a Roman Catholic Church Rathgormack made national headlines in 2021 when, to avoid the loss of the village's last pub,19 locals invested €12,000 each and formed a company to purchase it.
The closest centres of population to Rathgormack are the County Tipperary towns of Carrick-on-Suir (7 km to the north-east) and Clonmel.
Tourism is also important, with a hiking centre located in the village.
[5] In 1921, during the Irish War of Independence, a District Inspector of the Royal Irish Constabulary, Gilbert Potter was executed by Dinny Lacey of the Third Tipperary Brigade of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) on the banks of the River Clodagh, about 1 km south of the village.