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Archive Record
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GB ARCHON 2913 PA02-01-02-1 · Item · 1919 to 1920
Part of Our Lady and St Peter Parish, Aldeburgh

Headed "Short Report"
Aug 3 1919: Reading of Bishop's Letter
Sept 21: House Ellandene & land
Sept 22: Novena to the Little Flower to Sept 30
Sept 26: money for purchase of house & land; friend advancing money; rent-free; establish oratory?; house ceding to me in 3 years; workmen started
Sept 28: Land in Leiston (40ftx120ft); parishioners respond with funds; land conveyed Nov 7 1919
Oct 5: Leiston Altar Society started; Leiston Building Fund started (£37-7-6); Catechism Class to be held every Tuesday - Morelli letting room for class rent & light free. Aldeburgh: Appeal for Building Fund; Altar Society reorganised (£100-1-6); Children of Mary reorganised as parish sodality (12 members); Sunday school & choir practices instituted; Foundation of Guild of St Steven (10 members)
Oct 15: £60 given towards motorcycle for between Aldeburgh & Leiston
Nov 9: Norwich appeal
Nov 12: Promise for Leiston of vestments, ciborium, monstrance, Crib figures.

Delaney, Vincent Rev
Dr Helsham - Sr Agnes report
GB ARCHON 2913 PA03-02-01-2-1 · Part · 21 July 1923
Part of St Benet's Minster Parish, Beccles

"Owing to the ill-health of Sister Agnes OSM, I have advised her to obtain permission to break the fast before Daily Communion."

Helsham, Christopher T DSC Dr (-c.1943)
GB ARCHON 2913 PA28-01-01-156 · Item · 23 November 1926
Part of Our Lady of the Annunciation Parish, King's Lynn

Report describing the parish having fallen vacant upon Canon Eeles' death and possession being taken on 23 November 1926 by Fr Stokes under the authority of Fr Page. Describes the process by which Fr Stokes took possession of the church. Document drawn up and witnessed by the notary, K De Havilland Ollard
Signed by Witnesses: Fr Page & Fr Ketterer

Ollard & Ollard (1903-2013)
GB ARCHON 2913 PA03-01-01-99 · Item · 14 April 1928
Part of St Benet's Minster Parish, Beccles

Dr C T Helsham (4 The Walk, Beccles) providing a health report about Fr Banham. Fair sized chest would which requires daily dressing; generally food health; but will not allow him to say Mass last Sunday. Three further months to heal. Needs first class nursing and not to return to being sole priest at Billing.
manuscript annotation: "Thanked. Have relieved Cyril B from duty of Billing. Ap 16/28"

Helsham, Christopher T DSC Dr (-c.1943)
GB ARCHON 2913 PA03-01-01-104 · Item · 2 December 1928
Part of St Benet's Minster Parish, Beccles

Dr C T Helsham (The Hollies, Beccles) providing a health report about Fr Banham. Wound has almost healed. But, he has a Tubercular infection in his lungs. It is an early one and he has gone away to a sanatorium. he will not be returning to duties for 12 to 18 months.
manuscript annotation: "Answered. Thanking for the report. Dec 3/28"

Helsham, Christopher T DSC Dr (-c.1943)
GB ARCHON 2913 PA03-01-01-106 · Item · 10 December 1928
Part of St Benet's Minster Parish, Beccles

Dr C T Helsham (The Hollies, Beccles) providing a health report about Fr Banham. Medical Officer at the sanatorium unable to find infection in the right lung (the good one); not necessary to explore the old wound; continue TB regime; possible operation for the left lung; no idea of length of stay.

Helsham, Christopher T DSC Dr (-c.1943)
GB ARCHON 2913 PA30-01-02 · File · 1950
Part of Our Lady of Good Counsel and St Peter Parish, March

Statistics return - assumed to have been created by the priest in charge for 1950 & 1951 - Rev Gaffney.
1980 report (4 pages typewritten) on "Our Lady of Good Counsel and St Peter, March" with annexes: 1. Life Group newsletter; 2. Parish Newsletter for October 18/19; 3. Personal account 'The "Magic" of Lourdes' by Molly John dated 22-9-1980, 4 sides typewritten with manuscript annotation "An MS sufferer".
Fr J Smith letter 1 page manuscript dated 24-4-1982 - reporting 1236 Catholics instead of 750 earlier reported.
22-10-1987 2 page Briefing for Bishop on visit to March.

Gaffney, William J Rev
GB ARCHON 2913 PA02-01-04-68 · Item · 2-11-1954
Part of Our Lady and St Peter Parish, Aldeburgh

Structural state of tower [summary]:

  1. considerable cracks in lower tower, settlement a probable cause, other cracks in church building due to same;
  2. Cracks in upper tower, affecting roof area locally, indicating settlement and tower tipping;
  3. Flintwork cracking, coming away, loss of adhesion allows water into structure behind, possibly leading to further damage;
  4. waterspout too short, leading to added dampness and aggravate settlement under way
  5. Parapet in a bad way, stones loose, iron band may be making matters worse.
    No imminent danger of collapse but the tower is "on the move" and deterioration will continue. Not recommend making good - lists significant work required - possible cost £1000. Best option to bring the tower down and continue the roof over the top of it.
    Copy of the report sent to the Bishop.
Wearing & Hastings
GB ARCHON 2913 PA19-01-02-3 · Item · undated c.1959
Part of St Mary's Parish, Great Yarmouth

No author / no date
Text is:
GREAT YARMOUTH
Yarmouth had sheltered Anselm Beach,0.S.B., in the winter of 1603-04 – he had landed here in 1603, perhaps accompanied by Roland Preston, 0.S.B. - and it was visited by the Norwich Jesuits at infrequent intervals from at least as early as the time of Fr. Angier (1774-1788), in whose handwriting is a record: "To Yarmouth to comfort the people, to postchaise, £2-2s." The first intermittently resident priest was Joseph de Pierreville, a French emigre, who was offering Mass at least as early as 1809 in Dene House (a site partly covered now by Woolworths), belonging to the Bedingfelds, and who started a register in 1810 and signed it until he went to Oxburgh in 1815. The emigre Dacheux (doubtless once at Lynn) signs in 1816 and 1817, and d'Eterville, from Norwich, 1817-1820.

The Stewart family, which settled in the town about 1815, placed its house at the priest's disposal. The visits from Norwich took place every Sunday from 1822, and it was not until October l822, when Catholics were a dozen, that Joseph Tate S.J., came to live in the town. He bought a large corn warehouse in George Street and adapted it as a chapel and residence. It is now called Lombard House, and the chapel may be recognised from its two Corinthian pillars and small choir loft. When he left in 1835 the congregation numbered fifty to eighty. James Clough,S.J., succeeded him and was in turn followed, in 1841, by an exiled Spaniard, Charles Lopez, who had offered his services to the Society. On 24th September“1850, he opened the existing church of St. Mary in Regent Road, and a cemetery. When he left Yarmouth he had raised the congregation to 200 and left behind him a reputation for sanctity and friendship for the poor which is still fragrant.

A chapel was added to the cemetery on 5th September, 1867, whilst Rev. W. Clifford,S.J. was rector. The same year a few Notre Dame Sisters of Namur left after only a short stay, though the schools, built by Father Lopez continued in use as such until 1881, afterwards being used for other purposes. The Dames of St. Louis run a primary and high school. Lowestoft and Gorleston in Suffolk are both offshoots of Yarmouth, whilst Rev. Stephen Webb,S.J. saw three further Mass centres started, one of St. Thomas More, Hemsby, in 1947, that of Our Lady and St. Michael in 1948 in the Catholic Cemetery chapel on Caister Road, and that of St. Teresa of the Child Jesus at Acle in 1956.

When Fr. Lopez built the church, which is of ‘dressed’ flint, the site was on the sand hills, and people thought it quite out of place. Did they think his foresight foolish when on 22nd August 1950, a hundred years later, Bishop Parker consecrated it? A new site for a church has just been purchased at Caister. Fr. Dennis,S.J. has had the church beautifully restored recently, and has added a new window to St. Teresa.

Unknown
GB ARCHON 2913 NTM-02-04-3 · Item · 1961 to 2005
Part of Northampton Diocesan Travelling Mission - Fr McCormick

Collation of newsletters, notes and comments by Fr McCormick.
pg1: title page with map of Northampton Dioses pre-1976
pg2-4: comments by Fr McCormick on hid life as a Travelling Missionary. Note: the newsletters (produced from February 1961) are scanned from the remaining copies he had, "I lost quite a few ... production was somewhat erratic."
pg4-6: newsletter No.1 8 February 1961
pg6-7: newsletter No.2 10 May 1961
pg7-9: newsletter No.4 1 November 1961
pg9-11: newsletter No.5 1 February 1962
pg11-12: newsletter No.6 14 May 1962
pg12-13: Travelling Mission entry for Diocesan Year Book 1963
pg13-15: newsletter No.7 1 February 1963
pg15-17: newsletter No.8 15 August 1963
pg17-18: newsletter No.9 21 January 1964
pg18-20: newsletter No.10 16 July 1964
pg20-21: Travelling Mission notes for Diocesan Magazine 15 April 1965
pg21-22: Changes in the Liturgy of the Church [personal view]
pg22-23: Newsletter No.11 21 April 1965
pg23-25: newsletter No.12 16 March 1966
pg25-26: Travelling Mission Notes 2 June 1970
pg26: Travelling Mission Notes 15 July 1970
pg26-27: Travelling Mission Notes 4 August 1970
pg27: Travelling Mission work in Stowmarket Parish (May 1979 - for Parish magazine)
Pg27-28: Travelling Mission Mass Centre at YUp Well, Norfolk 1959-1975 (27 July 1982 - notes written for Diocese of Northampton)
Pg28: Postscript - "In August 1975 Bishop Charles Grant of Northampton closed down the Travelling Mission. He told me he had reluctantly decided to do this in view of the pending division of the Northampton Diocese in June 1976 and the setting up of the new Diocese of East Anglia. Needless to say there was great sadness in all Travelling Mission Mass Centres. After seventeen years as Diocesan Travelling Missioner I too was greatly saddened! As I mentioned on the first page of this brief outline of the Travelling Mission work I can once again see the day when in order to keep the presence of the church alive in the community today there will have to be another form of mobile approach. Alas I am no longer strong enough to do such work but could, I am sure, give any interested bishops a few hints and tips!"

McCormick, Robert L. Rev (-2015)
GB ARCHON 2913 PA02-a-04-5 · Item · January 1963
Part of Our Lady and St Peter Parish, Aldeburgh

Leiston cum Sizewell UDC's alternative site on offer as direct exchange for existing site held by Catholic Church. Report addresses: District, Encumbrances, Adjoining owners, Boundaries, Planning, Ground, Services, Site layout, Recommendations. Wearing & Hastings recommend the site to the Bishop for acceptance as there are benefits, not least it is larger and hence cost effective in exchange.

Wearing & Hastings
GB ARCHON 2913 WAL-01-03-1 · Item · February 1965
Part of Walsingham Association - National Body

Part 1

  1. Steering Committee Membership
  2. Introduction
  3. Summary of major recommendations
  4. ToRs and Timescale for report
  5. The Spiritual Dimension
  6. Membership Review and Statistics
  7. Finance
    Part 2
  8. Marketing and Publicity
  9. New members - opportunities sector 'A'
  10. New members - opportunities sector 'B'
  11. New members - opportunities sector 'C'
  12. Branch review
  13. Members facilities
  14. WA Sales items
  15. Overseas membership
  16. Spiritual benefits of membership - review
  17. Individual members
  18. Membership committee standing committee
  19. Conclusions
    Part 3
    Appendices to report
Walsingham Association
GB ARCHON 2913 PA28-05-01-152-1 · Part · 11 April 1968
Part of Our Lady of the Annunciation Parish, King's Lynn

An overview of baptismal numbers and relating that to the immigration from London - do not support even the smallest comprehensive school until 1980 and possibly not until 1990. Suggestions on managing the RC schools structure with the future of the convent school in doubt in the long run. Perhaps the solution is cooperation with the Anglicans to obtain a secondary school.

Catholic Education Service
GB ARCHON 2913 PA38-01-02-1 · Item · February 1969
Part of The Sacred Heart Parish, St Ives

A surveyor's report on the Church and Presbytery in St Ives. Conclusion: "These buildings are in a reasonably sound condition with the exception of the roof over the Presbytery and the ceilings mentioned in the report." Referring to a proposed internal rearrangement of the Presbytery and extension to the Church, it lists other work items, with a cost estimate, to be taken into account: New roof (£1200), ceilings (£150), replacement of floor (£350), Redecoration (£300), New garage (£350).

Unknown
GB ARCHON 2913 PA02-a-04-12 · Item · November 1969
Part of Our Lady and St Peter Parish, Aldeburgh

Need to restructure the church to allow the celebrant to face the congregation at the altar. Addresses this and makes suggestions to improve appearance of the church building inside and out; ends with "Can you afford a good new bronze door handle?".

Bush, David Mr BArch FRIBA
The Walsingham Project
GB ARCHON 2913 WSHR-03-02-1 · Item · 1970
Part of Walsingham Shrine

"The overall purpose of this project is to focus the attention of Catholics throughout England n the part played by Our Lady in the contemporary Church..."
Development: Amenity Block (built, paid for, operating); Open-Air Church Building; Parking/Picnic area; Slipper Chapel repairs
Cost £200,00; Five Year Diocesan Plan; Personal Gifts from the Clergy; Appeal.
Appraisal
Proposal

  1. Reaffirmation of the National Shrine
  2. Support for the Appeal
  3. Walsingham Trust established with responsibility for the Shrine
Clark, Alan Charles Rev DD (1919-2002)