Community of the Holy Family

Summary

The Community of the Holy Family (CHF) is an Anglican religious order of nuns, originally founded in the Church of England, but now active in Italy and the United States.

History edit

In England edit

 
St Pega's Hermitage, Peakirk, now a private home

In origin, the community was formed of well educated young women who wished to commit themselves to educational work and evangelism. Three of the four original members, who were admitted as novices in August 1896, were graduates of Newnham College, Cambridge; one of these was Agnes Mason, the Mother Foundress.[1]

The focus of the community's work was in London and the south-east of England, with convents and schools in the capital and in both Kent and Sussex. There was also a small branch house at Cambridge for sisters wishing to study. At Holmhurst St Mary, Baldslow, St Leonards-on-Sea in East Sussex, the sisters ran a girls' school, St Mary's School, from the 1930s to 1981;[2][3] its best-known pupil was Joanna Lumley.[4]

From 1937,[5] a daughter house was located at Peakirk, near Peterborough, attached to the ancient hermitage of St Pega, for those Sisters wishing to follow a more contemplative form of the religious life, although the Order's principal charism was of outreach, not enclosure. Sister Dilys left the Community at the Reverend Mother's request in 1968 and joined the more contemplative and enclosed Community of the Sisters of the Love of God at Fairacres in Oxford.

Overseas edit

The Community expanded overseas and ran a teacher training college, All Saints' College, at Nainital in India (1915–45).

Decline edit

In January 1997 the remaining three sisters moved to Malling Abbey in Kent and lived in the gatehouse, alongside the resident Benedictine community. Two of the sisters died in 2002 and 2006, leaving just Sr Jean Beare CHF. The community closed with the death of Sr Jean on 27 November 2010.[6]

Sister Julia Bolton Holloway, educated by the nuns of the Community, with a doctorate in Medieval Studies from Berkeley, joined them for their final four years at Holmhurst St Mary, and following the closure of the Order she continues the ethos of the Mother Foundress for education and ecumenism, as a solitary hermit in Florence, Italy. Subsequently, she developed a teaching ministry amongst gypsy families around Florence.

Revival edit

In April 2020, with permission of Sister Julia Bolton Holloway and the Diocese of Chichester, Sister Abigail Lilly rechartered the order. The revived Order sought to develop a range of teaching and educational ministries;[7] and Sister Julia Bolton Holloway, still living and working in Italy, was the Mother Superior of the Order.

As of 2023, the Community was not listed as part of the Anglican Church.[8]

External links edit

  • Archived 2020-04-12 at the Wayback Machine
  • Umilta website, Rule of the Community of the Holy Family

References edit

  1. ^ Biography of Mother Agnes Mason, Umilta.net, Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  2. ^ Miss Hortin-Smith by Joanna Lumley | Tes News, accessdate: 1 July 2020
  3. ^ "Holmhurst "St Mary"". Retrieved 27 January 2023.
  4. ^ "Joanna Lumley: "I have always loved getting older, so being 70 is fabulous"". The Big Issue. 4 July 2016. Retrieved 4 July 2020.
  5. ^ "Sisters at Peakirk Hermitage". Peterborough Standard. 10 September 1937. Retrieved 26 January 2023.
  6. ^ 'Community of the Holy Family' article in Anglican Religious Life 2012-13, published 2011 by Canterbury Press, Norwich, pages 5-6.
  7. ^ "Official website". Archived from the original on 2020-04-12.
  8. ^ Anglican Communion website, Anglican Communities Locations page, retrieved 2023-11-28