Cathedral ‘Open and Free’

Dean Bennett of Chester

Alex Bruce

Cathedral ‘Open and Free’
Bookmark and Share

Alex Bruce

Distributed for Liverpool University Press

240 pages | 6.1 x 9.2 | © 2000
Paper $25.00 ISBN: 9780853239246 Published April 2000 For sale in North America only
This book sets the work of Frank Selwyn Macaulay Bennett, Dean of Chester 1920–37, in context, and traces the influence on other cathedrals of the changes he instituted at Chester. His earlier work as parish priest and his interrelated writings on theology and on education, health, and ecumenism are examined for the light they shed on his practice. Despite the efforts of his predecessors, Bennett found Chester Cathedral in need of much repair and renovation if it were to match his ideal and fulfill the purpose he had in mind for it. In the early twentieth century Anglican cathedrals in England were generally perceived as remote and unwelcoming places and of interest mainly to antiquarians seeking to inspect their monuments; admission charges were levied on visitors. Frank Bennett changed all this. In 1920, he promptly declared Chester Cathedral "open and free"; he would lock up nothing except the safe. "Visitors" now became "pilgrims", whose voluntary offerings rapidly surpassed the sums previously raised by compulsory entry charges. By the time he retired in 1937, the Cathedral’s finances were in credit; the fabric of the church and adjoining monastic buildings had been repaired, renovated, and developed, and all were fully in use, as Bennett had planned in 1920.
Contents
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Series editor's note
Preface
I. The new dean
II. Parish priest: apprentice to master craftsman
III. Through Welsh Disestablishment to English deanery
IV. The nations' cathedrals adopt the Chester model
V. The cathedral restored
VI. The nature of a cathedral
VII. The New World: 'cathedrals and other things'
VIII. Robust theology, educational philosophy, ecclesiastical politics
IX. Harmony and discord: a dean and his two communities
X. Private lives, last lap, and journey home
Epilogue: Today
Appendix: Was Bennett ever considered for a Bishopric?
Bibliography
Index
For more information, or to order this book, please visit http://www.press.uchicago.edu
Google preview here

Chicago Manual of Style |

RSS Feed

RSS feed of the latest books from Liverpool University Press. RSS Feed