1982-1985 - St Edmunds, Bury St Edmunds
1986-? - St George's, Norwich
1988-1989 - Our Lady and English Martyrs, Cambridge
1990-1993 - (Our Lady of Lourdes), Dogsthorpe, Peterborough
Peterborough
16 People / Organisations results for Peterborough
1928: born. Italy
1954: Ordained
1955-1958: Northern Ireland
1958: came to England
~1983: (16 months) curate at St John the Baptist, Norwich
1984-2004: PP in Southwold at 56yrs
2004: Retired
1955: born
1975-1980: St Mary's Seminary, Oscott
1979: Ordained Deacon
1980, 12 July: Ordained at St Mary's, Great Yarmouth
1983-?: Diocesan Information Officer
1983: Editor for NEWS
1990, July: Editor for East Anglia News
1991/2: Diocesan Youth Chaplain
Father Edmund joined the Diocese of East Anglia in September 1997, having previously been a member of the Order of Saint Benedict. He has served the following parishes and hospitals in the diocese:
1997-2001 Assistant priest in Bury St. Edmunds parish
2001-2003 Assistant priest in All Souls parish, Peterborough
1998-2003 Served hospital chaplaincy departments at West Suffolk Hospital NHS Trust and Peterborough District Hospital NHS Trust.
2003-2010 Parish Priest of Downham Market parish
2010 - Parish Priest of Woodbridge & Framlingham parish
1980: ordained
2001: retired
1985: ordained
1990-?: PP at St Peter and All Souls, Peterborough
?-1996-?: PP at St Mary's, Thetford
1998-?: PP at Our Lady of the Annunciation, King's Lynn
2019-: St Ethedreda, Ely
1913: birth
?-1943: Section Leader Fire Service
1943: recalled to the Army
1943-1945: promoted from Private to Captain
1946[?]-1952: Osterley, Middlesex and Beda College, Rome
1952: Ordained
1969-1985 PP at King's Lynn
1988-1993: PP Aldeburgh
1993: retired
1999: died
Born in Peterborough. Intended to become a priest but a long illness prevented him from doing so. Served in the Peterborough Fire Service. Joined Suffolk Regiment as a private in 1940. Left the army as Captain in 1946 and studied for 6 years at Osterley & Beda College in Rome. Ordained and worked in Bedfordshire before moving to Aldeburgh.
Fr Dick Healey retired to Montana in Great Barton, near Bury St Edmunds. While resident there Fr Dick will be the chaplain to the Community of the Benedictine Sisters of Our Lady of Grace and Compassion and the nursing home. He was brought up in Ipswich and was a regular altar server in St Mary's and St Pancras parishes. In 1973 he was sent to Campion House, Osterley and in 1974 he transferred to Oscott Seminary and was ordained as a priest in 1980. He served in St George's, Norwich and St Edmunds in Bury St Edmunds, as parish priest at St Mary's, Ipswich, at Brandon and Mildenhall, at Woodbridge and as part of the clergy team in Our Lady and the English Martyrs, Cambridge. His final four years as parish priest at Fakenham.
1980: Ordained
1996: writing to Bishop's Office re Guild of St Stephen
2016-2020: PP at Fakenham
2020: Retired
-~1987: De La Salle Brother
1987: Head of the St Joseph’s College, Ipswich from the autumn of 1987
1998: Ordained
1998-?: Asst. Priest, All Souls' Peterborough
?-2007: Sawston as Parish Priest
2007-2014: PP St Felix, Felixstowe
died: 2019
Obituary: RCDEA Diocesan Yearbook 2020 pg75
1957: Innsbrook seminary
1962: ordained
1977- : PP at Peterborough
1986: DEA - Commissioner for schools in Cambridgeshire
1993-1994: PP at St Benet's, Beccles
1994: St Joseph's, Southampton
1994-2003: St Etheldreda, Newmarket
2003: retired
1990: Writing to bishop about her brother
Founded in 1900 as The Citizen.1914 renamed as The Peterborough Citizen. 1940 back to its original title, then in 1942 became the new title again. In 1946 became the Peterborough Citizen and Advertiser. In 1976 it became the Peterborough Advertiser. 1989 renamed the Citizen and Advertiser in March before becoming the Peterborough Citizen in May.
Tony Philpot was born in 1935 in Croydon. When war broke out the family moved to Bedford. Following education at Bedford School, he began his studies at the English College in Rome, was ordained in 1959, and returned to the Northampton diocese to serve as curate in Bedford and then the Cathedral.
His first pastoral charge was Leighton Buzzard, and, thereafter, all his parish appointments were in what became the East Anglia diocese. He went to Ipswich, Newmarket, and to Our Lady and the English Martyrs in Cambridge, where he remained for fourteen years. His time there, where his gifts as a talented preacher and a gentle pastor were much appreciated, was one of change.
Tony was involved in reorganisation of Catholic state secondary education in Cambridge. When the East Anglia diocese was established, Bishop Clark put him in charge of RE, and later made him vicar general. The 1980s were a time when support to diocesan priests was given priority, and he co-ordinated this work. He also become involved in the Jesus Caritas Fraternity, and eventually became the worldwide responsible. This took him out of the country frequently, and, as a seasoned traveller, he soon learnt the perils of lost luggage. He boasted that he could be away for three weeks, just taking hand luggage with him and washing his clothes on a daily basis.
He was elected to the Old Brotherhood of the English Secular Clergy, the successor of the body which had, in penal times, been responsible for governing the Church in England. When he left Cambridge in 1994, Tony took the unusual step of returning to Ipswich, but was soon asked to look after Palazzola, the country villa of the English College, close to Lake Albano. He was increasingly asked to give retreats, and many dioceses benefited from his accessible wisdom and deeply-rooted spirituality. He wrote two books – ‘Priesthood in Reality’ and ‘You Shall be Holy’. Unsurprisingly, he was asked to move to the College to become Spiritual Director, a post he held for five years.
Retirement took him to Peterborough, where his linguistic gifts were harnessed in ministering to the large Portuguese-speaking community. After some years there he decided to move to London when an independent-living flat became available at St Anne’s in Stoke Newington. On being diagnosed with cancer he was transferred to the nursing home section of St Anne’s, where died on 16th July 2016.
2015-2019: PP at Sacred heart, St Ives
2020- : PP at St Peter and All Souls, Peterborough
1943: ordained
1955-1968: PP at All Souls, Peterborough
1980-1993: PP at Ely
2002, 27 August: died
1926, November: born
1953: ordained
1965-1968: PP at St Mary's, King's Lynn
1968-1977: PP at All Souls, Peterborough
1978-1982: PP at St Edmund's, Bury St Edmunds
2001: retired from Dereham
2002: Died