Tablet: Saturday 27th March 1897

St. Benedict’s Rome: The Benedictine Community, founded under the patronage of the holy Patriarch, in the Via San Nicola da Tolentino, by the Lady Abbess Pynsent, which has existed for a few years with the approval of the Roman ecclesiastical authorities, presented on St. Patricks Day, in October last, a petition for its formal recognition. Thanks to the interest personally manifested by the Holy Father himself, the nuns are now enabled to celebrate the feast of the Pater Monachorum, after the additional gratification of having received full and explicit acknowledgment as the members of a Monasterium. The glad tidings came early in the week, while Father Magnier, C.SS.R., was preparing to preach on “Sin.” He changed the subject of his discourse and bade the nuns to pray for the welfare of the Holy Father, which they did, going in procession to the shrine of St. Benedict, outside their chapel. The enclosure is a modified one, conceived in the spirit put forth in A Feature in Benedictine Life (St. Benedict’s, Rome, 1896), one of the manuals published by the community. … (continues) …


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Referenced

GRO1138 Devonport: Lucretia Anna Maude Pinsent: 1857 – 1934

Tablet: Saturday 2nd March 1895

… … You may now state the following facts: A house has been taken in the Via S. Niccole da Tolentino, and several ladies of good position are, under the guidance of the Lady Abbess Pynsent, 0.S.B., living together in the observance of regular life. This is with the encouragement of ecclesiastical authority pending canonical approbation. Although in the meantime the ladies wear no external distinctive habit, their domestic life is disposed according to the practices of a formed community, with the recitation of the divine office, rising to Matins at 1.30. A special object which they have in view in their preparation is to be of use in giving instruction to others who are led to seek admission into the Church, and so to assist the clergy in this part of their work. Until the present, Mass was said in a room fitted up as a chapel. They have now, however, constructed on the ground floor an oratory tastefully decorated in the Gothic style. Behind the altar is the choir, separated from the sanctuary by open tracery. The altarpiece is a copy of the fresco painting of our Lady before which St. Benedict is said to have prayed when a child. Two life-size statues of St. Benedict and St. Scholastica stand on either side of the chancel arch. There is accommodation in the body of the oratory for about too externs. On Sexagesima Sunday his Eminence the Cardinal Vicar solemnly blessed the new oratory and the picture of Our Lady, and then celebrated Mass, all the music of which was rendered in well executed Gregorian, without external help … …  (continues) …


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Referenced

GRO1138 Devonport: Lucretia Anna Maude Pinsent: 1857 – 1934

Tablet: Saturday 22nd March 1890

Deaths: Shea: Of your charity pray for Louisa Catherine (Kitty Mary Pynsent) beloved wife of George Shea, who died at St. John’s Newfoundland on the 17th inst., aged 31. R.I.P.


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Referenced

GRO1139 Hennock: Louisa Catherine Pinsent: 1858 – 1890

Tablet: Saturday 19th October 1901

The National Church of St. Patrick in Rome: The Times of Wednesday published the following letter from the Rev. Richard O’Gorman, O.S.A., in answer to Miss Pynsent’s let of complaint against the Irish Augustinians in Rome. Sir, In common with many other Catholics in the United Kingdom, I read with surprise and equal pain a letter from Miss Pynsent under the above heading which appeared in your issue for September 21st and on which you commented on in some length in the course of a leading article … …

(very long letter laying out facts and ending as below)

… As to the animus displayed in Miss Pynsent’s levels against the ecclesiastical authorities in Rome. I have nothing to say here. Such diatribes may produce the effect intended on the Protestant gallery here in England, but most thoughtful and reasoning people will appraise them at their real value. Miss Pynsent has endeavoured to arouse racial animosities by insinuating that the Irish Augustinian Fathers have acted with undue severity towards her and the members of her community for no other reason than that they are Englishwomen. I will leave it to the good sense of your readers to decide whether such a course of action was ever likely to be pursued by a body of Irish gentlemen, more especially when we bear in mind that some of Miss Pynsent’s own subjects were themselves Irish either by birth or descent.

YOURS faithfully, Richard A. O’Gorman O.S.A Hythe, Kent, October 12:

MISS PYNSENT’S CASE: We print below the portions of Miss Pynsent’s letter which present her case against the Irish Augustinians: The number of the community and their work increased so much they began … (largely illegible)


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Referenced

GRO1138 Devonport: Lucretia Anna Maude Pinsent: 1857 – 1934

Tablet: Saturday 5th October 1901

Notes: In its issue of September 21 The Times devoted nearly three of its columns to a letter entitled “The English Benedictine Nuns in Rome.”

To see so much precious space devoted to the affairs of half a dozen nuns was in itself something of the strangest, and at once suggested that the letter in question contained very unpleasant tidings. And in fact it was a sad record of the consequences of incapacity, credulity, and unbusiness-like ways. The nuns had contracted a debt of £24.000, and when the time came for payment found they had no funds. A rich novice had left them under disgraceful circumstances, and the Abbess was of opinion that the Vatican ought therefore to have stayed the hands of the creditors.

The whole story was written in a spirit of bitter partisanship, and common fairness seemed to require that we should allow the Irish Augustinians, whose conduct was complained of, an opportunity of defending themselves before giving the publicity of our columns to the wholesale accusations brought against them.

Even The Times seems to have felt some hesitation about giving such a one-sided story to the world, so that, though the letter bore the date August it appeared only on September 21st.

We decided therefore, before reproducing the letter of the ex-Abbess, to make some inquiries, and specially as to the accuracy of the statement that an Italian Court of First Instance had decided that the Benedictine community were entitled to retain possession of the property they had acquired from the Augustinians, although admittedly it had not been paid for. Meanwhile a letter in The Times of Monday, from the Bishop of Clifton, seems to make further inquiry superfluous and to supply a complete vindication for the position taken up by the authorities at the Vatican.

But Miss Pynsent censures the ecclesiastical authorities for not interfering to prevent the expulsion from the convent. Your readers will be surprised to learn that Miss Pynsent does not believe in the Christian religion. She confided this to me in May 1900, but begged me not to let anyone know.

Early in this year she wrote to release me from my promise of secrecy and said she did not care if all the world knew her unbelief. Many of your readers will not think any the worse of the lady for being an Agnostic, but I think they will all acknowledge that the Roman authorities of the Church could not assist to avert the dispersion and expulsion of a community which was presided over by an Abbess who did not believe in Christianity.

Probably, on reflection, Miss Pynsent will admit that it is hardly reasonable to complain that the authorities at the Vatican did not actively exert themselves to perpetuate the rule of a lady who has ceased to be a Christian over a community of Catholic nuns. Perhaps, too, it may some day or other occur to Miss Pynsent to wonder whether, being in fact an Agnostic, she was justified in writing to The Times as though she were still only a disappointed Catholic.

We need hardly point out that the suggestion of The Times that the suit brought by the Irish Augustinians against Miss Pynsent’s community was the only instance of an appeal by Catholic ecclesiastics to the Italian Courts in secular matters is very wide of the mark. To go no further back than a few weeks ago, our readers will remember the victorious way in which Mgr. Campbell vindicated his honour in those same Courts against some journalistic traducer. 


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Referenced

GRO1138 Devonport: Lucretia Anna Maude Pinsent: 1857 – 1934

Tablet: Saturday 27th July 1895

The Bank Failures in Newfoundland: Warrants were issued on Saturday by Judge Conroy for the arrest of Sir Robert Thorburn, K.C.M.G., a former Prime Minister and member of the Newfoundland Legislative Council; the Hon. A. W. Harvey, Minister without portfolio in the present Cabinet; Mr. Donnelly, Receiver-General in the last Cabinet; and Mr. Grieve, another leading politician, all being directors of the insolvent Union Bank, as well as of Mr. Pinsent, the bank manager. They are charged with issuing false balance sheets in 1893 and 1894 on the affairs of the bank, and thereby inducing the plaintiffs and others to become customers, creditors, or shareholders, whereby they were defrauded of large sums of money. Bail was accepted in two sureties of 18,000 dollars each, and each director 36,000 dollars. The arrest of these influential men has produced a profound sensation.


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Referenced

GRO1157 Hennock: Charles Speare Pinsent: 1838 – 1914