The National Pilgrimage

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The National Pilgrimage (also known as The National) is an annual pilgrimage to the Anglican Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham in the village of Little Walsingham in the English county of Norfolk. The first pilgrimage took place in 1923 in the parish church of St Mary and All Saints, Little Walsingham. The shrine, which had been destroyed in the Dissolution of the Monasteries, had been revived in the church the previous year by the Vicar, Fr Hope Patten. The annual pilgrimage was established in 1938, when the statue of Our Lady was moved to a new shrine church. Originally known as the Whit Monday Pilgrimage, it has been known as The National Pilgrimage since 1959.

The churchmanship of St Mary and All Saints became significantly more Catholic in 1882 when the musician-priest George Ratcliffe Woodward was appointed Vicar.[1] A later Vicar, Fr Edgar Reeves, introduced a statue of Our Lady.[2] By 1919 the Church Times was able to describe it as "the famous pilgrimage church of our Lady".[3] At the end of his incumbency in 1920, Reeves hosted a pilgrimage for the Feast of Corpus Christi during which the Eucharist was celebrated with a procession and incense.[4]

Patten, who arrived in Walsingham as Vicar in 1921, was a firm Anglican Papalist, convinced of the need to restore pre-Reformation devotions.[5] Our Lady of Walsingham was such a devotion. On 6 July 1922, with great ceremony and the ringing of church bells, a copy of the throned and crowned mediaeval image of Our Lady of Walsingham was revealed in a side chapel.[6]

The first Whitsuntide pilgrimage

The first Whitsuntide pilgrimage took place the following year, 1923. It was organised by the League of Our Lady, an Anglican Marian devotional society, which later merged with the Confraternity of Our Lady to form the Society of Mary. The pilgrimage began at the London Anglo-Catholic church of St Magnus-the-Martyr on the Tuesday in Whitsuntide,[7] with the Marian hymns Ave Maris Stella, Ye who own the faith of Jesus and Her virgin eyes.[8]

There were further pilgrimages throughout the 1920s organised by the League of Our Lady, but they did not keep to Whitsuntide week.[9][10] In 1927 there were four pilgrimages,[11] but it was the May pilgrimage that appears to have been most prominent.[12] The first episcopal attendance at one of the May pilgrimages was in 1925, by Mowbray O'Rorke, who had resigned as Bishop of Accra (in what was then the Gold Coast) the previous year.[13]

The Bishop of Norwich, Bertram Pollock, was unimpressed by the revival of Marianism, and, in 1930, insisted that Patten remove the image from the church. Undeterred, and with financial support from the Anglo-Catholic layman Sir William Milner Bt, Patten bought a plot of land elsewhere in the village to build a new Holy House enclosed in a small church. Crucially, this was on land not owned by the Church of England, and, therefore, outside the control of the Bishop. The new Holy House was opened in 1931[14] and was built as a replica of the original shrine, destroyed on the orders of Henry VIII.[15] The translation of the image of Our Lady to the new shrine took place on 15 October 1931. It began with a High Mass sung by Bishop O'Rorke (by then the Rector of St Nicholas, Blakeney). After Benediction, the statue was carried in procession to the new shrine; the procession was half a mile long.[16]

The Whit Monday Pilgrimages

The shrine church was extended in 1938. Bishop O'Rorke, who had led celebrations for the Translation of the image in 1931, blessed the new nave and chapels on 6 June 1938, which was Whit Monday. As a result, from 1938 onwards the pilgrimage took place on the Whit Monday bank holiday, and was thereafter known as the Whit Monday Pilgrimage.[17] The 1939 Whit Monday pilgrimage was a pilgrimage for peace (given the looming fear of war).[18]

In 1941, the Church Times published a letter which, noting the "present difficulties in visiting Walsingham", asked readers to provide details of churches in London with local shrines of Our Lady of Walsingham.[19] War-time travel restrictions had been partially relaxed by the end of that year, and a pilgrimage was organised in January 1942 by the Catholic League.[20] The Whit Monday Pilgrimages were not held during the war years, although some small pilgrimages took place in 1943 and 1944.[21] A pilgrimage took place in June 1945, after VE Day.[22] The first large post-war Whit Monday Pilgrimage took place in 1946; the following year the Pilgrimage gained its second episcopal attendant, the Bishop of the Windward Islands (Horace Tonks).[23] The 1948 Whit Monday Pilgrimage was held as a pilgrimage of reparation for the South Indian Schism, being the Anglo-Catholic term for the union of South Indian churches, which had taken place the previous year.[24]

The National

Protestant protests

References

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