Joseph Shaw of the Latin Mass Society has posted to his flickr account some great photographs from a day of Eucharistic Recollection held at St Edmund’s College in Ware, Hertfordshire, England, led by Fr. Armand de Malleray, FSSP, assisted by Mgr. Gordon Read and Fr. Patrick Hayward, with the schola led by Mr. Christopher Hodkinson. Fr de Malleray gave spiritual conferences, and the day concluded with Solemn Vespers, veneration of a relic of St. Edmund of Abingdon, and Benediction, officiated by Mgr Read.
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Friday, September 13, 2013
Adeste Fideles and other treasures at St Edmund's College, Ware
Charles Cole
Set in the green countryside of Hertfordshire to the north of London lies St Edmund's College, Ware. St Edmund's, the oldest Catholic college in England, was originally opened as a seminary and later also became a boys' school. It traces its foundation to the establishment of an English College at Douay, Flanders in 1568 which was later reestablished in England in 1793. Now it is an independent Catholic school for boys and girls aged 3-18.
The College boasts a beautiful Chapel, one of two buildings in the Catholic Archdiocese of Westminster designed by Pugin, the other being the Church of St Thomas of Canterbury in Fulham. In a side chapel is the relic of St Edmund:
The College has a rich variety of treasures including these papal objects and relics of Pope Pius IX, a collection of mitres including a metal one which was worn by Bishop Challoner, and the cassock which Cardinal Odescalchi wore at the conclave of 1676 at which he was elected Pope Innocent XI.
The College Museum also contains this unusual curiosity: a cabinet which opens out to reveal a concealed altar:
