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It
all began in 1916, when Canon Croft bought a piece of land at the
junction of Skellingthorpe Road. At that time Skellingthorpe Road,
Hartsholme and Birchwood were just fields. Mass was said in a room
in Boultham Hall, some twenty people attended each week, and were
in the Parish of St Hugh's.
In 1948, Father Taylor
erected a wooden hut on the land purchased by Canon Croft and called
it St Peter's. The hut was originally used as a chapel of ease and
developed into a Mass Centre and school (prior to the present school
of St Peter and Paul being built).
On 2nd June 1953, the
people using the Hut presented Monsignor Atkinson and his curate,
Fr.P.Tierney, with the first Missal to be used for Mass at St. Peters.
This original Missal is still kept in the Presbytery and on the
fly leaf are the names of the people who formed the congregation
of St.Peters at that time.
The Hut had to be extended
to accommodate the growing congregation, but it continued to serve
as a Mass Centre until the new school was opened in 1958. Once the
school of St.Peter and St.Paul had opened, Mass was transferred
to the new school hall.
One of the parishioners
writes of this time:
Mr. and Mrs.Boaden, Fr. Leahy, a curate, and others used to play
tennis. The young girls were allowed to play tennis with the priests,
but were not to cycle through town, to or from tennis, with the
priests. The Priest's House is built on the tennis courts.
After the Ellison family
left Boultham Hall, it became the property of the City Council and
was used for a Park café and storage. Mass was said in an
upstairs room and we can only remember the steps up to the Hall
and the beautiful staircase. The room would be full for Mass and
people stood out on the staircase. Sometimes Fr.Peter Taylor, P.P.
of St.Hugh's would go by car to say Mass at Boultham Hall, or send
George Williams to drive a curate or supply priest and Ron Dillingham
or John Keane as server.
Early in 1948, Fr.Taylor
took John Keane with him to buy a storage hut from Reeves Haulage,
near Bardney. "The Hut", as it was called, was erected
by Fr. Taylor, Jack Keane, Bert Boaden, Don Wright, John Hanlon
and John Keane. They finished felting the roof in Trips Week, July
1948. The Hut door faced the hand gate, which was approximately
where the hand gate is today. On the right of the hut, the site
of the present church, allotments were still being worked as we
came to Mass in the early 1950s. Later, a second hut was bought
and added to make a cruciform shape. The new part became the sanctuary
and was plastered by Don Wright.
Now RAF chaplains were
being 'stood down' at some airfields, but with two cars it was possible
to serve the Boultham Hut and Bardney Airfield. George Williams
would drive a supply priest and server in Miss Fisher's Austin Seven
car, which she lent on Sundays. In about 1947 John Keane would collect
a Holy Ghost Father from Upton, near Newark in Fr.Taylor's car.
A Sacred Heart Father from Earl Shilton, Leicestershire, would be
met at Lincoln Station. Two suitcases were kept ready in St.Hugh's
Presbytery, each case was ready packed with vestments, altar vessels,
portable altar stones, altar wine and altar breads.
When Fr.Tierney came, as a curate, to Lincoln with Monsignor Atkinson,
he begged us not to say "The Hut" when referring to Boultham's
Mass Centre. Soon, he found that he was calling it "The Hut"
too. Brian Bennett helped us to sing plain chant for feast days.
After the school was
built, we had Mass in the school hall. There was a Saturday afternoon
rota for preparing the school hall. We put up a trestle table, for
the altar, on the stage; arranged rows of chairs, lifted out newly
acquired hassocks from under the stage. Flower vases, candle sticks,
crucifix, cassocks and cottas were kept in the medical room.
A curate, Fr. Snowden,
came down to Boultham. This was the beginning of a 'Dialogue Mass'.
He decided we could have a 'parish' newsletter made up of news and
adverts. It must have been one of the earliest church newsletters.
The R.C. Governor of Morton Hall brought his family and a row of
"his boys" to Mass in the school hall. Mr. Osborn, the
school's woodwork master, made us a wooden holy water stoop to use
in the school hall. It is used now in the Lady Chapel porch. When
Fr.Tierney returned as parish priest a few years later, he called
the newsletter CRUX. Working for the Hut and Mass in the Hall, brought
together the first parish council.
Before Our Lady's Church
was completed, the Knights of St.Columba undertook to collect donations
from men to provide an altar. The Catholic Women's' League collected
ladies' donations for a baptismal font. This idea was used again
for the new church of St.Peter and St. Paul. John Keane, KSC treasurer,
and I (Paddy Keane), as CWL Secretary, took in donations for the
altar and font.
On 2nd May, 1966, Bishop
Ellis ceremoniously blessed and laid the foundation stone of Ss.Peter
and Paul Church. He told the crowd gathered for the ceremony:
"You have gone about your work in my opinion in the right way,
first the school and then the church. This at first may seem blasphemous
but God does not need bricks and mortar more than living bricks
which are you and your children. You have put things in their proper
order, you have given your children a place where they can be brought
up properly."
In 1967, Monsignor Atkinson
opened St.Peter and St. Paul's Church for services, supplied from
St. Hugh's. Most of the Masses at that times were said by Fr. O'Sullivan.
The Church was consecrated by Bishop Ellis on 12th September 1968.
It had cost £80,000. The consecration was attended by Archbishop
Igino Cardinale and was the first time that an apostolic delegate
had visited the city since the Middle Ages. The words of wisdom
and guidance given by the Archbishop are as relevant today as they
were when the church was consecrated:
"Every Catholic should feel really at home when he is in a
Catholic Church. But your sense of community should not be restricted
to these holy precincts. When you leave the walls which now surround
you, they must stretch out with you into the troubled world. For,
although God dwells in this house, he craves much more to dwell
in the temple of your own body. The true Catholic must carry the
Church with him, wherever he goes."
The first Parish Priest
was Fr.Peter Tierney (1968-1980). In 1972, the crucifix that forms
one of the most dominant features of the church was hung above the
altar. Fr.Tierney had met the sculptor of the figure, Giacomo Vincenzo
Mussner, whilst on holiday in the Italian Tyrol. It was paid for
by Winnie Tracey in memory of her husband Jim.
In 1980 Fr.Brian Dazeley
was appointed Parish Priest, to be followed in 1985 by Fr.Michael
Lynch. During Fr. Lynch's time as Parish Priest, St.Hugh's Catholic
Primary School was moved into the parish - being opened by Bishop
McGuinness on 27 April 1994. On 30th May 1995, the new Parish Centre
was blessed by Bishop McGuinness (replacing the hut fondly known
as "Cathedral View").
In 1996, Fr.Stephen Lennon
was appointed Parish Priest and remained with the parish until 2000,
when he was replaced by Fr.Michael O'Donoghue. Prior to Fr. Lennon's
leaving the parish, plans were instigated to replace the front doors
of the church and create a narthex area behind one central door
- thus bringing the front entrance (that was largely unused) back
into operation.
Due to various hitches that were encountered, this work is still not complete. The rest of the church is also showing its age and is in desperate need of redecoration. The organ is also "groaning in the last pangs of death". So far the work that has been undertaken has cost more than the original cost of the building and much more work is still needed to restore the original dignity of the church. As usual, all donations for renovation, redecoration, lighting and the new organ fund can be sent to
The Parish Priest
The Presbytery
Ss Peter and Paul
2a Skellingthorpe Road
LINCOLN
LN6 7RB.
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