Courtfield Estate Records, (GB 0210 COUELD)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Courtfield Estate Records, (GB 0210 COUELD) Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Cymorth chwilio | Finding Aid - Courtfield Estate Records, (GB 0210 COUELD) Cynhyrchir gan Access to Memory (AtoM) 2.3.0 Generated by Access to Memory (AtoM) 2.3.0 Argraffwyd: Mai 08, 2017 Printed: May 08, 2017 Wrth lunio'r disgrifiad hwn dilynwyd canllawiau ANW a seiliwyd ar ISAD(G) Ail Argraffiad; rheolau AACR2; ac LCSH This description follows NLW guidelines based on ISAD(G) Second Edition; AACR2; and LCSH https://archifau.llyfrgell.cymru/index.php/courtfield-estate-records archives.library .wales/index.php/courtfield-estate-records Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Allt Penglais Aberystwyth Ceredigion United Kingdom SY23 3BU 01970 632 800 01970 615 709 [email protected] www.llgc.org.uk Courtfield Estate Records, Tabl cynnwys | Table of contents Gwybodaeth grynodeb | Summary information .............................................................................................. 3 Hanes gweinyddol / Braslun bywgraffyddol | Administrative history | Biographical sketch ......................... 3 Natur a chynnwys | Scope and content .......................................................................................................... 4 Trefniant | Arrangement .................................................................................................................................. 4 Nodiadau | Notes ............................................................................................................................................. 4 Pwyntiau mynediad | Access points ............................................................................................................... 5 - Tudalen | Page 2 - GB 0210 COUELD Courtfield Estate Records, Gwybodaeth grynodeb | Summary information Lleoliad | Repository: Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Teitl | Title: Courtfield Estate Records, ID: GB 0210 COUELD Virtua system control vtls004250406 number [alternative]: GEAC system control (WlAbNL)0000250406 number [alternative]: Dyddiad | Date: [13 cent.]-[20 cent.] / (dyddiad creu | date of creation) Disgrifiad ffisegol | 0.572 cubic metres (20 boxes) Physical description: Dyddiadau creu, golygu a dileu | Dates of creation, revision and deletion: Hanes gweinyddol / Braslun bywgraffyddol | Administrative history | Biographical sketch Nodyn | Note The Vaughan family established itself at Courtfield, Monmouthshire, when John Gwillym purchased the estate for £800 in 1562, and when his only daughter Sybil married James Vaughan of Llangattock. James and Sybil's heir was their second son, William (d. 1601), who married Jane, daughter of Richard Clarke of Wellington, near Hereford. William and Jane were the first members of the family to face persecution for their allegiance to the Roman Catholic faith. Jane appeared on the recusant rolls for Welsh Bicknor from 1592 to 1619 and associated herself with an early act of public resistance at Hereford in 1605 when a number of people were prosecuted for hearing Mass at the Darren on the Herefordshire slope of the river Monnow. In 1601 Courtfield was inherited by their son, John Vaughan (1575-1639). His recusancy earned him monthly fines and the confiscation of two-thirds of his land. He was eventually forced to sell extensive parts of the estate. He was imprisoned for a period, but later pardoned by Charles I. John's son and heir, Richard Vaughan (1600-1697) was known as 'The Grand Old Man of Courtfield'. The family lost more than half of its ancestral land in confiscation during this time. In 1651, the manor of Welsh Bicknor with the mansion house of Courtfield was sequestered. The goods and livestock were auctioned, leaving Richard with a notional freehold and one third of the rental income. He married Agatha, daughter of John Berington of Cowaine Court, Herefordshire. Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Tudalen | Page 3 GB 0210 COUELD Courtfield Estate Records, On his death, Richard left a son, John Vaughan (1675-1754). John married secondly, Elizabeth, daughter of Philip Jones of Llanarth Court, another Catholic family. Besides succeeding to the manor of Welsh Bicknor, he also inherited the manors of Ruardean, Gloucestershire, and Clyro, Radnorshire, as heir to his childless half-brothers, John and Richard Vaughan. A 1718 parliamentary survey of his lands valued his estates in four neighbouring counties at £996. Two of his sons, Richard and William were actively associated with the Jacobites. Both fought at Culloden, and fled to Spain after the final defeat of Charles Edward Stuart's forces. They were excluded from the general pardon given by George II in 1747 and their property was seized. Their elder brother, John (d. 1780) inherited Courtfield, but on his death without issue the estate passed to William Vaughan (1738-1796), son of Richard. William's son, William Michael Thomas John Vaughan (1781-1861) married Teresa Maria Weld in 1803. The couple re-built Courtfield. His heir was his eldest son, John Francis Vaughan (1808-1880). He purchased property in Ireland, and served as a Justice for Monmouthshire, Herefordshire, Gloucestershire, Radnorshire, and County Mayo, the extent of his offices reflecting the spread of his estates. The estate then descended in the male line until Joseph Herbert Vaughan (b. 1910), who sold the Courtfield house with about 50 acres to the Mill Hill Missionary Society. Hanes Gwarchodol | Custodial history Part of the archive was listed by J. Hobson Mathews in 1905 before the records were deposited at NLW. Natur a chynnwys | Scope and content Estate records of the Vaughan family of Courtfield, Welsh Bicknor, Herefordshire, and associated families of Vaughan of Ruardean, Gloucestershire, and Weld of Lulworth, Dorset, 13 cent.-20 cent.; almost all title deeds relating to lands chiefly in Monmouthshire, Radnorshire, Herefordshire, and Gloucestershire,[temp Edward I]-1916; and manorial records, 1454-1792. The Vaughans were notable adherents to Catholics and the archive includes acquittances to Joan Vaughan of Ruardean, a Catholic recusant, for the payment of fines, 1620-1644, and papal licences and instruments of possession of Cardinal Herbert Vaughan, Archbishop of Westminster. Nodiadau | Notes Nodiadau teitl | Title notes Ffynhonnell | Immediate source of acquisition Deposited by Major Joseph H. Vaughan, Courtfield in April 1949. Trefniant | Arrangement Arranged chronologically. Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Tudalen | Page 4 GB 0210 COUELD Courtfield Estate Records, Cyfyngiadau ar fynediad | Restrictions on access Readers consulting modern papers in the National Library of Wales are required to sign the 'Modern papers - data protection' form. Amodau rheoli defnydd | Conditions governing use Usual copyright laws apply. Rhestrau cymorth | Finding aids The J. Hobson Mathews catalogue (1905) is available at NLW and HMC, but does not cover all the records at NLW. A working list of some of the papers not catalogued by Mathews is available at NLW. Disgrifiadau deunydd | Related material Further papers relating to the Courtfield estate are National Library of Wales, Sir Leonard Twiston Davies Papers, 1142-1842. Ychwanegiadau | Accruals Accruals are not expected. Nodiadau eraill | Other notes • Statws cyhoeddiad | Publication status: Published Pwyntiau mynediad | Access points • Courtfield Estate (Heredfordshire, England). • Vaughan, Joan. (pwnc) | (subject) • Vaughan, Herbert, 1832-1903. (pwnc) | (subject) • Vaughan family, of Courtfield -- Archives. • Vaughan family, of Ruardean. • Weld family, of Lulworth. • Deeds -- Wales -- Radnorshire. (ffurfiau dogfennol) | (documentary form) • Deeds -- England -- Gloucestershire. (ffurfiau dogfennol) | (documentary form) • Deeds -- Wales -- Monmouthshire. (ffurfiau dogfennol) | (documentary form) • Deeds -- England -- Herefordshire. (ffurfiau dogfennol) | (documentary form) • Catholics -- Wales. (pwnc) | (subject) Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Tudalen | Page 5.
Recommended publications
  • Just As the Priests Have Their Wives”: Priests and Concubines in England, 1375-1549
    “JUST AS THE PRIESTS HAVE THEIR WIVES”: PRIESTS AND CONCUBINES IN ENGLAND, 1375-1549 Janelle Werner A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History. Chapel Hill 2009 Approved by: Advisor: Professor Judith M. Bennett Reader: Professor Stanley Chojnacki Reader: Professor Barbara J. Harris Reader: Cynthia B. Herrup Reader: Brett Whalen © 2009 Janelle Werner ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT JANELLE WERNER: “Just As the Priests Have Their Wives”: Priests and Concubines in England, 1375-1549 (Under the direction of Judith M. Bennett) This project – the first in-depth analysis of clerical concubinage in medieval England – examines cultural perceptions of clerical sexual misbehavior as well as the lived experiences of priests, concubines, and their children. Although much has been written on the imposition of priestly celibacy during the Gregorian Reform and on its rejection during the Reformation, the history of clerical concubinage between these two watersheds has remained largely unstudied. My analysis is based primarily on archival records from Hereford, a diocese in the West Midlands that incorporated both English- and Welsh-speaking parishes and combines the quantitative analysis of documentary evidence with a close reading of pastoral and popular literature. Drawing on an episcopal visitation from 1397, the act books of the consistory court, and bishops’ registers, I argue that clerical concubinage occurred as frequently in England as elsewhere in late medieval Europe and that priests and their concubines were, to some extent, socially and culturally accepted in late medieval England.
    [Show full text]
  • The Birds of Herefordshire 2015
    The Birds of Herefordshire 2015 Herefordshire Ornithological Club Annual Report Jackdaws and Hereford cattle at Much Marcle in March 2015 (Photo: Mick Colquhoun) Editorial This is the 65th annual report of the ‘Birds of Herefordshire’, the Herefordshire Ornithological Club’s (HOC) annual publication for 2015, which I hope you will enjoy reading. During the year a total of 172 species were recorded, summary details and highlights of which are presented in the systematic list section on pages 30 – 98, for which I wish to thank the species authors. An alphabetic index of species is included on pages 146 – 147 to help readers locate individual species information and a gazetteer of place names mentioned in the species accounts is provided on pages 142 – 145. The county list of species (now numbering 281) was boosted by the sighting of a Spotted Sandpiper, a county ‘first’, at Wellington Gravel Pits in May 2015 (see article on pages 28 – 29), and seven other rarities with 20 or fewer previous county records also made an appearance in Herefordshire during the year: Red-crested Pochard, Marsh Harrier, Turnstone, Temminck’s Stint, Red-necked Phalarope, Caspian Gull and Common Redpoll. A tremendous amount of effort has gone into validating the records of rarities on the county list during the past year and the review article on pages 12 – 18 makes enlightening reading and provides a definitive list and dates of sightings for all 94 rarity species with 20 or fewer records. The large increase in the number of bird records received in 2014, compared with previous years, continued in 2015 with a similar 46,000 records being utilised in compiling this annual report.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae
    CURRICULUM VITAE Name: Rene Matthew Kollar. Permanent Address: Saint Vincent Archabbey, 300 Fraser Purchase Road, Latrobe, PA 15650. E-Mail: [email protected] Phone: 724-805-2343. Fax: 724-805-2812. Date of Birth: June 21, 1947. Place of Birth: Hastings, PA. Secondary Education: Saint Vincent Prep School, Latrobe, PA 15650, 1965. Collegiate Institutions Attended Dates Degree Date of Degree Saint Vincent College 1965-70 B. A. 1970 Saint Vincent Seminary 1970-73 M. Div. 1973 Institute of Historical Research, University of London 1978-80 University of Maryland, College Park 1972-81 M. A. 1975 Ph. D. 1981 Major: English History, Ecclesiastical History, Modern Ireland. Minor: Modern European History. Rene M. Kollar Page 2 Professional Experience: Teaching Assistant, University of Maryland, 1974-75. Lecturer, History Department Saint Vincent College, 1976. Instructor, History Department, Saint Vincent College, 1981. Assistant Professor, History Department, Saint Vincent College, 1982. Adjunct Professor, Church History, Saint Vincent Seminary, 1982. Member, Liberal Arts Program, Saint Vincent College, 1981-86. Campus Ministry, Saint Vincent College, 1982-86. Director, Liberal Arts Program, Saint Vincent College, 1983-84. Associate Professor, History Department, Saint Vincent College, 1985. Honorary Research Fellow King’s College University of London, 1987-88. Graduate Research Seminar (With Dr. J. Champ) “Christianity, Politics, and Modern Society, Department of Christian Doctrine and History, King’s College, University of London, 1987-88. Rene M. Kollar Page 3 Guest Lecturer in Modern Church History, Department of Christian Doctrine and History, King’s College, University of London, 1988. Tutor in Ecclesiastical History, Ealing Abbey, London, 1989-90. Associate Editor, The American Benedictine Review, 1990-94.
    [Show full text]
  • St Margaret's Church Welsh Bicknor
    St Margaret‘s Church Welsh Bicknor Contents St Margaret‘s Church Welsh Bicknor ............................................................................ 2 Introduction .................................................................................................................... 3 Location and setting: ...................................................................................................... 4 Building history: ............................................................................................................ 7 Furnishings and Fittings ............................................................................................... 16 Bibliography: ............................................................................................................... 26 State of repair: .............................................................................................................. 26 Sale of the Church (2011) ........................................................................................... 27 Restoration work on the church (2016)........................................................................ 27 List of Graveyard memorials ....................................................................................... 28 Aerial picture of the graveyard .................................................................................... 31 Welsh Bicknor Graveyard Plan.................................................................................... 32 Welsh Bicknor Gravestones Numbered 11-24............................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Saracens Head, Symonds
    steps to the picnic area, and descent the path you came up, past the Biblins, Monmouth and the Wye cave. 11 When you reach the track below the barrier, cross over and 2¾ or 10¼ miles: Easy/fairly easy The Saracens Head Inn follow the path steeply down through the woods. 12 At a wooden seven circular walks from Food fence, bear left (still heading downhill). 13 The path eventually Allow 1–2 hours for the shorter walk and 4–5 for the longer (more if We serve a wide variety of dishes that change from emerges between gardens at the car park at Symonds Yat East. Turn you plan to look round Monmouth). Both routes use the hand ferry (fee payable) to cross the Wye on the return (you are advised to season to season from our Lunch Menu, Dinner right to return to the Saracens Head. check that it is running before setting off) and the shorter route Menu and daily specials board. Sandwiches and crosses the mildly unnerving Biblins footbridge. Riverside paths may filled organic baguettes are also served during King Arthur’s Cave (3¾ miles: Moderate) be muddy in places after rain. The outward route as far as lunchtimes. Allow 2–2½ hours. Uses the hand ferry (fee payable) across the Wye Monmouth is accessible to cyclists (returning the same way). on the outward journey, and the mildly unnerving Biblins footbridge Our chefs use fresh ingredients which are locally 1 From the front door, facing the river, turn left and walk past the on the return.
    [Show full text]
  • Cllr Yolande Watson: Herefordshire Councillor for Kerne Bridge Page 1
    May 2020 - Cllr Yolande Watson: Herefordshire Councillor for Kerne Bridge Goodrich & Welsh Bicknor Parish • No new matters arising this month from within the Parish • Outstanding: investigating ‘whose’ responsibility is it to clean up area near the bridge of A40 Highways England); on-going conversations with a local resident re: SEN transport; awaiting legal response to a Private Rights of Way issue in Goodrich; future road/embankment works + Bilbins Bridge in Symonds Yat East; C1257 reopening • Please also read ‘issues across three parishes’ (below) • For residents who want to read my full report, which includes what I am doing in the other Parishes and in Herefordshire Council: please go to: www.wagpc.org.uk and click on the link to ‘Ward Councillor’ Walford Parish • Positive and constructive conversation with the new Co-ordinator of the Walford Community Support Scheme + agreed to be a referee as I am very supportive of the Co- ordinators ideas re: sustainable/nutritious food projects/programme + gave the scheme 8 bottles hand sanitizer for volunteers • Contacted by residents regarding their (or others) planning applications and (illegal?) structures being built in the Parish, a number of issues on Leys Hill (most are now resolved), closure of footpath and removal of footbridge in Hom Green • Conversations with Parish Councillors re: Memorial Project and Drains • Outstanding: Increase in dog litter on Howle Hill (awaiting information from Parish Council on costs); HGV sign on Howle Hill; Formal Complaint re: accident on WA39 (awaiting
    [Show full text]
  • HEREFORDSHIRE Is Repeatedly Referred to in Domesday As Lying In
    ABO BLOOD GROUPS, HUMAN HISTORY AND LANGUAGE IN HEREFORDSHIRE WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE LOW B FREQUENCY IN EUROPE I. MORGAN WATKIN County Health Department, Aberystwyth Received6.x.64 1.INTRODUCTION HEREFORDSHIREis repeatedly referred to in Domesday as lying in Wales and the county is regularly described as such in the Pipe Rolls until 1249-50. Of the two dozen or so charters granted to the county town, a number are addressed to the citizens of Hereford in Wales. That fluency in Welsh was until 1855oneof the qualifications for the post of clerk to the Hereford city magistrates indicated the county's bilingual nature. The object of the present investigation is to ascertain whether there is any significant genetic difference between the part of Herefordshire conquered by the Anglo-Saxons and the area called "Welsh Hereford- shire ".Assome moorland parishes have lost 50 per cent. of their inhabitants during the last 50 years, the need to carry out the survey is the more pressing. 2.THE HUMAN HISTORY OF HEREFORDSHIRE Pre-Norman Conquest Offa'sgeneral line of demarcation between England and Wales in the eighth century extending in Herefordshire from near Lyonshall to Bridge Sollars, about five miles upstream from Hereford, is inter- mittent in the well-wooded lowlands, being only found in the Saxon clearings. From this Fox (i) infers that the intervening forest with its dense thickets of thorn and bramble filling the space under the tree canopy was an impassable barrier. Downstream to Redbrook (Glos.) the river was probably the boundary but the ferry crossing from Beachley to Aust and the tidal navigational rights up the Wye were retained by the Welsh—facts which suggest that the Dyke was in the nature of an agreed frontier.
    [Show full text]
  • Cardinal Wiseman and St Edmund's
    chapter vi Cardinal Wiseman and St Edmund’s 1850-1865 n 1850 the Hierarchy was restored in England and Wales, and the system of dioceses with Iordinary bishops replaced the tired system of apostolic vicariates. Nicholas Wiseman was created Archbishop of Westminster and Cardinal. Bright opportunities existed alongside the inevitable practical problems; the division of the old vicariates into dioceses led to much discussion about the distribution of finances and jurisdiction. Many bishops hoped that each diocese would eventually have its own seminary, as the Council of Trent envisaged, and that the old Douay system of educating laics alongside clerics would soon come to an end. Moreover, while large Colleges such as St Edmund’s continued to train priests for several dioceses , the question arose of which bishop was in charge. It was a vexed question and in 1863 Rome eventually decided that the bishop in whose diocese the College was situated had spiritual jurisdiction and responsibility for the students’ care. Temporal matters, on the other hand, were the remit of the local bishops, which in St Edmund’s case meant Westminster and Southwark. Cardinal Wiseman had spent much of his life in Rome first as a student and then Rector of the Venerable English College. He had little sympathy with the conservatism of many ‘old’ English Catholics and wanted to introduce ‘Roman’ principles into his new diocese. In 1851 William Weathers was appointed President at St Edmund’s. The Cardinal wrote to Mgr Talbot, the Above: Cardinal Wiseman. English-born confidante of Pius IX, that with Cox’s departure St Edmund’s had been ‘cleared of Left: Wiseman Receiving Relic 1853.
    [Show full text]
  • Origins and Development of Religious Orders
    ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT OF RELIGIOUS ORDERS William A. Hinnebusch, O.P. The article is from a Journal: Review for Religious. It helps us to understand the CONTEXT of St Ignatius while founding the Society of Jesus. An attentive study of the origins and history of religious orders reveals that there are two primary currents in religious life--contemplative and apostolic. Vatican II gave clear expression to this fact when it called on the members of every community to "combine contemplation with apostolic love." It went on to say: "By the former they adhere to God in mind and heart; by the latter they strive to associate themselves with the work of redemption and to spread the Kingdom of God" (PC, 5). The orders founded before the 16th century, with the possible exception of the military orders, recognized clearly the contemplative element in their lives. Many of them, however, gave minimum recognition to the apostolic element, if we use the word "apostolic" in its present-day meaning, but not if we understand it as they did. In their thinking, the religious life was the Apostolic life. It reproduced and perpetuated the way of living learned by the Apostles from Christ and taught by them to the primitive Church of Jerusalem. Since it was lived by the "Twelve," the Apostolic life included preaching and the other works of the ministry. The passage describing the choice of the seven deacons in the Acts of the Apostles clearly delineates the double element in the Apostolic life and underlines the contemplative spirit of the Apostles.
    [Show full text]
  • Arundel to Zabi Brian Plumb
    Arundel to Zabi A Biographical Dictionary of the Catholic Bishops of England and Wales (Deceased) 1623-2000 Brian Plumb The North West Catholic History Society exists to promote interest in the Catholic history of the region. It publishes a journal of research and occasional publications, and organises conferences. The annual subscription is £15 (cheques should be made payable to North West Catholic History Society) and should be sent to The Treasurer North West Catholic History Society 11 Tower Hill Ormskirk Lancashire L39 2EE The illustration on the front cover is a from a print in the author’s collection of a portrait of Nicholas Cardinal Wiseman at the age of about forty-eight years from a miniature after an oil painting at Oscott by J. R. Herbert. Arundel to Zabi A Biographical Dictionary of the Catholic Bishops of England and Wales (Deceased) 1623-2000 Brian Plumb North West Catholic History Society Wigan 2006 First edition 1987 Second, revised edition 2006 The North West Catholic History Society 11 Tower Hill, Ormskirk, Lancashire, L39 2EE. Copyright Brian Plumb The right of Brian Plumb to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988. Printed by Liverpool Hope University ‘Some of them left a name behind them so that their praises are still sung, while others have left no memory. But here is a list of generous men whose good works have not been forgotten.’ (Ecclesiasticus 44. 8-10) This work is dedicated to Teresa Miller (1905-1992), of Warrington, whose R.E.
    [Show full text]
  • YHA Wye Valley - Access Statement
    YHA (England & Wales) Trevelyan House, Dimple Road, Matlock, Derbyshire, DE4 3YH Tel. +44(0)1629 592 700 www.yha.org.uk YHA Wye Valley - Access Statement Introduction YHA Wye Valley, formally Welsh Bicknor, set in 25 acres on the banks of the River Wye, is great for activity breaks, school trips and family holidays; it even has its own canoe landing station! Located in the heart of the Royal Forest of Dean, close to Symonds Yat Rock, there are a number of activities on site; including archery, nightline, electric bridge to name just a few, and there are miles of footpaths to explore for walking holidays and trails for cyclists of all levels. We aim to cater for the needs of all visitors in this 78-bed hostel; a 3-storey building, with a 2 storey annexe and assorted out-buildings, located in the heart of the Wye Valley. We have three ground floor rooms, but unfortunately none of our bedrooms or bathrooms meets modern standards of accessibility. We look forward to welcoming you. If you have any queries or require any assistance please phone 01629 592700 or email [email protected]. Pre-Arrival The nearest rail station is Gloucester which is 25.5 miles away. The nearest bus stop is approximately 1.6 miles away in Goodrich Village, or on the other side of the river near Lydbrook. There are limited bus services which run to these stops. This service usually runs accessible buses. Local taxi companies will not drive down to the hostel entrance. They will only drop off/pick up at the top of the drive (see below for information about condition of drive).
    [Show full text]
  • The English Benedictine Congregation and The
    THE ENGLISH BENEDICTINE CONGREGATION AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF EALING ABBEY IN LONDON. On 12 March 1997, Right Reverend Dom Laurence Soper, 0. S. B., Abbot of Ealing Abbey, opened the centenary celebrations of this London Benedictine monastery with a ceremony in the monastery cemetery and a procession to the abbey for Conventual Mass. The centenary programme of Ealing Abbey notes that ‘12 March 1897 was the day Dom Bernard Bulbeck arrived from Downside to be the first parish priest in Ealing. He took up residence in Castle Hill House which used to be on the site of the lawn above the present Cemetery.? The opening of the centenary celebrations also emphasized the Benedictine roots of this London monastery: ‘For the first fifty years Ealing was a dependent house of Downside Abbey, near Bath. On 19th December 1947, Ealing was established as an independent Conventual Priory. It was raised to the status of an Abbey on 26th May 1955.? The Benedictines of Downside set up this monastic foundation in London at the request of Cardinal Herbert Vaughan, who wanted the monks to take charge of the Divine Office at Westminster Cathedral. In the deliberations surrounding the decision to accept Vaughan?s proposal, however, members the English Benedictine Congregation never minimized or lost sight of the monastic character of this new adventure. At the end of the nineteenth century, many English Roman Catholics believed that a cathedral in central London would provide a testimony, as well a place of worship, to the respectability and achievements of their religion. Cardinal Herbert Vaughan, who became the Archbishop of Westminster in 1893, strongly supported the construction of a new cathedral for his large urban archdiocese.
    [Show full text]