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Father Victor Braun and the Catholic Church in England and Wales, 1870–1882

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2015

Extract

Nineteenth century London, like many towns and cities in Britain, experienced phenomenal population growth. At the centre of the British Empire, and driven by free trade and industry, it achieved extraordinary wealth, but this wealth was confined to the City and to the West End. East London, however, consisted of ‘an expanse of poverty and wretchedness as appalling as, and in many ways worse than the horrors of the industrial North’. There was clear evidence of the lack of urban planning, as factories were established close to the immense dock buildings constructed near Stratford. Toxic materials such as paint and varnish were produced in large chemical works owned by the German chemist, Rudolf Hersel, as were matches by the firm Bryant and May, and rubber, tar and iron for the building trade by various industrialists. Social historians have viewed the poverty of mid-nineteenth century London's East End as a symbol of urban disintegration in which skilled artisans were reduced to sweated, lowly-paid, labourers. Their homes, built close to the industrial sectors, were erected hastily and cheaply, and lacked proper hygienic and sanitary facilities, so that slum conditions prevailed. Moreover, this housing had to be demolished frequently to make way for new roads and railways, thus creating great hardship for an already destitute people.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Catholic Record Society 2007

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References

Notes

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32 Having escaped the siege of Paris, Mother Odile emigrated to America and founded the Sisters of Mary, St. Louis, Missouri, in the early 1870s. There are two biographies of her life: Gabriel Henninger, M. SSM. Sisters of Mercy and their Mission (Sisters of Mercy, St. Louis, Missouri, 1979).Google Scholar Claire Day SSM. A Woman for all Times (Sisters of Mercy, St. Louis, Missouri, 1980).

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59 L. No. 25.

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61 Ibidem.

62 Ibidem.

63 Ibidem.

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66 Ibidem.

67 Ibidem.

68 Ibidem.

69 Lady Lothian, Cecile Chetwynd, daughter of 2nd Earl Talbot. Born 17 April 1808 at Ingestre Hall, Stafford. Became a Roman Catholic in 1850. Died 13 May 1877 in Rome. An account of her public and charitable works was given in a discourse pronounced after her death in the Jesuit Church, Farm St., London, 29 May 1877. A memoir with portraits was published by her granddaughter, Cecil Kerr, in 1922. Gibbs, Vicary (ed.) The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom. New Edition [London, St. Catherine's Press, 1912, Volume 8], p. 155.Google Scholar Lady Londonderry, Elizabeth Frances Charlotte. Born 13 December 1813. Widow of Richard (Wingfield) 6th Viscount Powerscourt. Married 4th Marquess of Londonderry on 2 May 1846 at the British Embassy, Paris. Became a Roman Catholic in 1855. Died aged 70 and was buried on 8 September 1884 at Newtownards, Northern Ireland (Gibbs, p. 115).

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71 Ibidem, p. 87.

72 Ibidem.

73 National Census for Stratford, April 1871. East London Records Office. Town Hall, Stratford, London.

74 L. No. 26.

75 L. No. 27.

76 Ibidem.

77 L. No. 28.

78 Ibidem.

79 Ibidem.

80 Ibidem.

81 L. No. 34.

82 L. No. 31.

83 Ibidem.

84 L. No. 30.

85 Ibidem.

86 L. No. 35.

87 The Tablet (Supplement) London, 1 July, 1882, p. 34.

88 L. No. 35.

89 Ibidem.

90 Ibidem.

91 Josephine Gibson, Letter 2, op. cit.

92 Ibidem.

93 L. No. 35.

94 Ibidem.

95 L. No. 37.

96 L. No. 38.

97 L. No. 56.

98 L. No. 39.

99 Ibidem.

100 L. No. 61.

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108 Ibidem.

109 Parish Records, Shanagolden, Co. Limerick (Courtesy of Canon Tony O'Keefe).

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113 L. No. 135.

114 L. No. 77.

115 L. Nos. 89, 99.

116 L. No. 77.

117 Isobel Watson, A House in Hackney Wick (Article, pages unnumbered) Hackney History, Volume 1. (Friends of Hackney Archives, Hackney Archives Department 43, De Beauvoir Rd., London).

118 The Catholic Directory, 1873 (London, Burns and Oates Ltd.) p. 101.

119 Ibidem.

120 Lord Beaumont (Henry Stapleton), son of 8th Baron, born 11 August 1848 in Mayfair, London. Succeeded father in 1854. Attached to 17th Lancers during Zulu War in 1879 and fought in the Battle of Ulundi 1880. Became a Roman Catholic in 1869. Married Violet Isaacson in the Roman Catholic Oratory, Brompton, 28 July 1888. Died 23 January 1892 at 10 Wyndham Place, Marylebone. Buried at Carlton Towers, York (Gibbs, op. cit. Volume 2, p. 66).

121 L. No. 160.

122 Ibidem.

123 L. No. 194.

124 L. No. 359.

125 Ibidem.

126 Ibidem.

127 L. No. 388.

128 L. No. 153.

129 L. No. 153.

130 Rev.Foreman, A. H., A Brief History and Guidebook of Our Lady and St. Phillip's Church, Kirtling. (Pamphlet, undated), p. 4.Google Scholar

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132 Norwich Catholic Cathedral Archives, Notes on Kirtling Mission. Lord North's History, File XPD 34, pp. 1–4.

133 2nd Marquess of Bute (John Crichton Stuart). Born 10 August 1793. Educated at Eton and Christ's College, Cambridge. Married firstly 29 July 1818 Maria, daughter of George Augustus North, 3rd Earl of Guildford, at St. George's, Hanover Square. She died 11 September 1841. Remarried Sophia Frederica Christina, daughter of 1st Marquess of Hastings. Became a Roman Catholic in 1879. Died suddenly at Cardiff Castle in his 55th year, 18 March 1848. Buried at Kirtling, 23 March 1848 (Gibbs, op. cit. Volume 2, pp. 444–445).

134 L. No. 146.

135 Norwich Catholic Cathedral Archives, Lord North's Notes History File XTJ 34, p. 4.

136 Ibidem, p. 2.

137 L. 146.

138 Norwich Catholic Cathedral Archives, File XPD 34 K. Liber Defunctorum, October 1877, p. 1.

139 L. No. 211.

140 Ibidem.

141 Nottingham Diocesan Archives. Wilson House, Derby Road, Nottingham.

142 Brompton Oratory Archives. The Deputy Congregation Book. Journal of Archbishop Bagshawe, Father Gordon and Others 1845–1910, p. 91.

143 The Duke of Norfolk (Henry Fitzalan Howard). Born 27 December 1847 at Canton House Terrace, St. James’ Park. Educated at the Oratory School, Edgbaston. Special envoy from Queen Victoria to Pope Leo XIII to express her thanks for congratulations offered on the occasion of her Jubilee, 1887. Married Flora Paulyna Hetty Barbara, daughter of 1st Baron Donnington on 21 November 1877 at the Roman Catholic Church of St. Philip Neri, Brompton, Middlesex. She died on 11 April 1887. Married again on 15 February 1904 at York to Gwendolen Mary, daughter of Baron Herries. Died of gastric influenza at Norfolk House on 11 February 1917. Buried at Arundel on 15 February 1917. Leader of Roman Catholic communion in England (Gibbs, op. cit. Volume 9, p. 637).

144 Brompton Oratory Archives. Oratory Notes 1849–1899, p. 61.

145 L. No. 215.

146 Ibidem.

147 L. No. 174.

148 Nottingham Diocesan Archives, op. cit.

149 L. No. 216.

150 Archives, Archdiocese of Cardiff, Archbishop's House, Cathedral Road, Cardiff.

151 Ibidem.

152 Jones, Denise, History of St. Margaret's R.C. School, Aberdare (Aberdare, 1977) p. 1.Google Scholar

153 Ibidem.

154 Ibidem.

155 Ibidem.

156 L. No. 265.

157 Bishop Charles Grant's History of the Diocese of Plymouth, Volume 2. Visitation Reports of Bishop Graham of Plymouth, Plymouth, 1899, p. 178.Google Scholar

158 Birmingham Archdiocesan Archives. Diocesan Almanack 1883. Cathedral House of St. Chad's, Queensway, Birmingham.

159 L. No. 307.

160 L. No. 400.

161 Nave. op. cit. p. 30.

162 L. No. 266.

163 Ibidem.

164 L. No. 287.

165 L. No. 269.

166 L. No. 287.

167 L. No. 387.

168 L. No. 265.

169 L. No. 307.

170 Ibidem.