Peel Cathedral
Peel Cathedral, Isle of Man | ||
---|---|---|
The Cathedral Church of St German | ||
Canon(s) John Coldwell (St Patrick) | vacant (St Maughold) Joe Heaton (St German) Janice Ward (St Columba) | |
Curate(s) | Ruth Walker, Mark Radcliffe | |
Archdeacon | Irene Cowell | |
Laity | ||
Director of music | Peter Litman |
The Cathedral Church of Saint German or Peel Cathedral, renamed Cathedral Isle of Man, is located in Peel, Isle of Man. The cathedral is also one of the parish churches in the parish of the West Coast, which includes the town of Peel.[1] Built in 1879–84,[2] it was made the cathedral by Act of Tynwald in 1980.[3]
It is the cathedral church of the Church of England Diocese of Sodor and Man.
History
The patron of the cathedral, St German of Man (not to be confused with Germanus of Auxerre), was a Celtic missionary and holy man who lived from about 410 to 474. St German's Day is celebrated each year on 13 July.[4]
The original cathedral of St German was inside the walls of
The building fell into ruin in the 18th century. After a considerable period of debate over who owned the ruins and site, it was decided not to rebuild that cathedral. The present building was constructed in 1879–84 to replace St Peter's Church in Peel's market place.[6] Although the building of the New Church was intended to become the diocesan cathedral, Bishop Rowley Hill’s Cathedral Bill didn’t make its final reading in Tynwald before he died. His successor abandoned the proposed Bill. In 1895, Bishop Straton consecrated his chapel at the bishop's palace as pro-cathedral and instituted a chapter of canons with himself as dean; by 1960, St Nicholas' chapel was still pro-cathedral (or "Cathedral Chapel").[7] Bishopscourt's sale in 1979 left the diocese without a cathedral, and forced the issue of choosing a new cathedral; after public consultation,[8] Kirk German Parish Church was so designated, and officially made the cathedral in a service on All Saints' Day (1 November 1980).[9] The arrangement (bishop as dean) persisted even after the consecration of the new cathedral. The bishop was later described by John Betjeman as "that luckless Bishop whose cathedral is a beautiful ruin of green slate and red sandstone on an islet overlooking Peel".[10]
The cathedral has a dean and chapter. The chapter consists of the Archdeacon of Man ex officio and four canons who are all parochial clergy in the diocese.
St German's Cathedral is the mother church of the Diocese of Sodor and Man, which today consists of only the Isle of Man.[14]
In July 2015,
Vicars of German
1575–1585 | Philip Hogget |
1585–1621 | John Cosnahan |
1621–1660 | William Cosnahan |
1660–1661 | Thomas Harrison |
1661–1680 | Henry Lowcay |
1680–1682 | John Woods (elder) |
5 July 1682 – 1710 | Samuel Wattleworth |
10 June 1710 – 1730 | Matthias Curghey |
26 September 1730 – 1733 | John Woods (younger) |
1733–1741 | Thomas Christian |
28 July 1741 – 1742 | John Craine |
1744–1752 | James Wilks |
11 November 1752 – December 1754 | Robert Christian |
15 April 1758 – 1761 | Robert Brew |
4 March 1761 – November 1801 | Henry Corlett |
23 November 1801 – 1839 | James Gelling |
28 March 1839 – ? | John Stowell |
Deans of St German
- 1895 – 15 October 2011: The Bishop of Sodor and Man
- 15 October 2011 – present: Nigel Godfrey,[17] Vicar of the West Coast (Dalby, Kirk Michael, Patrick, Peel, and St Johns) since 2012
Chapter
As of 30 December 2020:[17]
- vacant
- Vicar of Douglas (St Ninian's), Diocesan Communications Officer and Canon of St Patrick — John Coldwell (canon since 2016)
- Vicar of Rushen and Canon of St German — Joe Heaton (canon since 2016)
- Vicar of Marown and Canon of St Columba — Janice Ward (canon since 2016)
Music
Bishop Hildesley established a children's choir at his private chapel at Bishopscourt as early as 1755. At the opening of Peel New Church in 1884, Ms
However, the modern Cathedral Choir was re-established in 2012 and includes a mixed boy and girl treble line (aged 7–14 years) drawn from island schools, in addition to a large adult voluntary choir (SATB). Choral services are sung on Sundays and consist of a Choral Eucharist and Choral Evensong.
There is a developing programme of choral scholarships for secondary school students.
The cathedral has a large two-manual Brindley & Foster organ in the chancel. It is planned that the pipe organ will be rebuilt, re-ordered and significantly enlarged over the next five years, to meet the demands of the cathedral's developing choral programme.
Organists and choirmasters
- 1983 Mike Porter
- 1986 Bernard Clark
- 1992 Stephen Dutton
- 1995 Harvey Easton
- 2001 Mike Porter
Organists and directors of music
- 2008 Donald Roworth
- 2012 Peter Litman[18]
Organ scholars
- 2015–2016 Jack Oades
- 2016–2017 Max Smith
- 2017–2018 Max Smith
- 2018–2019 Christopher Beaumont
- 2019–2020 Harry Sullivan
Associate organist
- from 2018 Stuart Corrie
References
- ^ Church Act 1980 and Western Pastoral Scheme 2012
- ^ "German Parish and Churches, Isle of Man". www.isle-of-man.com. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
- ^ Cathedral Church Act 1980 (of Tynwald)
- ^ "History". www.cathedral.im. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
- ^ Qualtrough, John K. (May 2003). "Field Visit to Peel Castle & St. German's Cathedral" (PDF). Isle of Man College. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
- ^ "Unholy row erupts over St German". IOM Today. IOM Today. 1 June 2009. Archived from the original on 23 April 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
- ISSN 0009-658X. Retrieved 27 June 2019 – via UK Press Online archives.
- ISSN 0009-658X. Retrieved 27 June 2019 – via UK Press Online archives.
- ISSN 0009-658X. Retrieved 27 June 2019 – via UK Press Online archives.
- ^ Betjeman, John. The Best of Betjeman (2000 ed.). Penguin Books. p. 162.
- ^ Church Act 1895 (of Tynwald), section 4
- ^ Church Offices Measure (Isle of Man) 2011 (Statutory Document 624/11)[1] Archived 2012-04-25 at the Wayback Machine, amending Church Act 1895 section 4
- ^ "St German's Cathedral, Isle of Man: New dean installed". BBC News. 15 October 2011. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
- ^ "St. German's, Peel". The Church of England, Diocese of Sodor and Man. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
- ^ "Princess Royal attends Service of Thanksgiving in Peel". BBC News. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
- ^ "Cathedral praised for LGBT welcome". Manx Radio. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
- ^ a b "Staff". Cathedral Isle Of Man. Retrieved 2 February 2019.
- ^ "Peel Cathedral". Friends of Cathedral Music. Archived from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2016.