OLPS history

The information on this page is reproduced from the website of Our Lady of Perpetual Succour

Founder: John George Kenyon, 11 October 1843 – 28 July 1914

John George Kenyon was living in London (at 24, Dorset Square, NW1) when the sudden unexpected death of his aunt (Mrs Henry Eden, widow of Admiral Henry Eden), made him heir presumptive of Gillingham Hall. Greatly influenced by his friend Cardinal Newman, he had already converted to Catholicism (on 24 May, 1870). He had fought for Pope Pius IX against Garibaldi as a Zouave, and had also spent six months in the Regina Coeli prison in Rome. John George Kenyon was a Papal Chamberlain, and so was required to spend certain winter months in Rome.

The arrival of John George Kenyon in the area, in January 1889, combined with changes in other notable local families, encouraged Dom. Ephrem Guy O.S.B. (who had arrived in Bungay in 1885) to revive long-running attempts to found a Catholic mission at Beccles. He was aided in this by Dom. Edmund Ford O.S.B., both of them based in Bungay at the time.

Within a month of John George Kenyon and his wife arriving in Gillingham to take up their inheritance, Father Ephrem came to interview them and enlist their help (on 19th February 1889). The two men already knew each other, as John later recalled:

“On October 11th, 1886 we had the pleasure of a visit (at 24 Dorset Square) from Dom. Ephrem Guy O.S.B. I had made the acquaintance of this zealous priest in the October of 1870 when (as a member of the committee which had charge of the arrangements for welcoming the Canadian contingent of the Papal Zouaves on their way from Rome back to Canada after the seizure of Rome by the Piedmontese) I had to call upon him in Liverpool at St Anne’s and had found him a most sympathetic helper. It was a pleasure now to hear of projects for spreading the faith in the Eastern Counties and to renew acquaintance with him. Later on we corresponded more about the matter.”

John Kenyon responded to Fr Guy with an initial donation of £500, plus a guarantee of £100 a year to support a priest at Beccles.

John Kenyon then purchased the land in Beccles on which now stands St Benet’s Minster, St Benet’s School, the school playing fields, the hall and the presbytery bungalow. The buildings now on the site (except the Minster itself) were gradually constructed with the money given by John Kenyon, and the site was vested in Downside. The original intention was to establish a small Benedictine community (with four or five monks) in Beccles.

Private family worship for the Kenyons took place in their own small chapel inside Gillingham Hall, nearby. Meanwhile, John Kenyon wished to have a church on his own land, and built Our Lady of Perpetual Succour as a Chapel of Ease to allow Catholic families in the village of Gillingham, many of whom worked on his estate, to worship regularly without having to travel all the way to Beccles. This church was not vested in Downside, but has always had its own Trustees, who are appointed by the family.

John Kenyon also bought a house in Grange Road, Beccles (near St Benets) for use by Dominican nuns, who arrived to work in the parish to staff the school which was built during this period by John Kenyon. This convent house was not vested in Downside, but in Our Lady of Perpetual Succour, Gillingham, which then had a small income from the rent for its maintenance.

After a change from the Dominicans to the Servites, the Poor Servants of the Mother of God arrived at Beccles, and were quite a large community then. They required larger premises, and acquired the house in Grange Road which had belonged to the architect Mr Banham (who had designed Bungay Church, St Benets, and OLPS Gillingham). Finally, the original convent was sold, and Ernest Arthur Bramley (husband of Mary Bramley, nee Todhunter, Trustee) invested the money in Charibonds for the benefit of OLPS Gillingham.

Icon

The church contains a copy of an icon first placed in the Church of San Matteo in Rome in 1499.

Our Lady of Perpetual Succour

The original picture was thought lost after Napoleon’s armies sacked that church in 1798 (in fact, it had been secretly placed in the care of the Augustinians). In 1866, Pope Pius IX ordered that the icon be given to the Redemptorist order at the Church of St. Alphonsus in Rome so that it could once again be placed on public view. Since then it has been copied and venerated in churches all over the world, including our church at Gillingham.

BRIEF NOVENA TO OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL SUCCOUR

Oh Mother of Perpetual Succour, grant that I may ever invoke your powerful name, the protection of the living and the salvation of the dying.
Purest Mary, let your name henceforth be ever on my lips.
Delay not, Blessed Lady, to rescue me whenever I call on you.
In my temptations, in my needs, I will never cease to call on you, ever repeating your sacred name, Mary, Mary.
Mother of Perpetual Succour, pray for me and grant me the favour I confidently ask of you.
[Then say three Hail Marys.]

LONGER FORM NOVENA

Dear Mother of Perpetual Help, from the Cross Jesus gave You to us as our Mother. You are the kindest, most loving of all mothers. Look tenderly on us Your children, as we now ask You to help us in all our needs, especially this one…

[pause to recall your petition]

While you were on earth, dear Mother, You willingly shared in the sufferings of Your Son. Strengthened by your faith and confidence in the fatherly love of God, You accepted the mysterious designs of His Will.

We too have our crosses and trials. Sometimes they almost crush us to the ground. Dearest Mother, share with us Your abundant faith and confidence in God. Make us aware that God never ceases to love us; that He answers all our prayers in the way that is best for us. Strengthen our hearts to carry the cross in the footsteps of Your Divine Son. Help us to realise that they who share the Cross of Christ will certainly share in His resurrection.

Dearest Mother, as we worry about our own problems, let us not forget the needs of others. You always loved others so much; help us to do the same. While praying for our own intentions, and for the intentions of all who make Your novena, we earnestly ask You, our Mother to help us comfort the sick and the dying, give hope to the poor and the unemployed, heal the broken-hearted, lighten the burden of the oppressed, teach justice to their oppressors, and bring back to God all those who have offended Him.

Dearest Mother, help us to avoid sin which separates us from our heavenly Father and from one another. Full of trust in You, we place ourselves under the mantle of Your maternal protection, and confidently hope for Your powerful help. Amen. 

Centenary

Our Lady of Perpetual Succour celebrated its centenary on the Feast of the Assumption – 16 August 1998.

Mrs Mary Bramley, granddaughter of John George Kenyon, planned a celebration to echo the celebrations given at the church’s original dedication, with a Mass followed by breakfast at Gillingham Hall, which became a large garden party with live music from a Loddon band.

A news report of the Centenary celebrations appeared in the Beccles and Bungay Journal on 21st August 1998: Beccles and Bungay Journal Centenary News. You can compare the report above with the original news report from 1898.

Margaret Knox, the organising genius behind the earlier Hassock Project, embroidered this beautiful commemorative tapestry which sits on a wooden chest in front of the right-hand family pew.