St George's Hanover Square

St George's Hanover Square

Sunday 27 June 2010

He's made it!

Seamus is there! Yes, St George's much-admired verger, Seamus O'Hare, has completed his 500-mile pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela. He arrived yesterday morning in time for an early Mass at the cathedral. And then it was off to the Pilgrim Office where he presented his credencial, stamped at each stop along the way to prove his entitlement to a compostela, the certificate pilgrims receive to mark their achievement.

I'm sure all who read this posting will join with the writer in congratulating Seamus on reaching his goal just 33 days after setting out.

Tuesday 22 June 2010

News from Spain

Our intrepid pilgrim Seamus O'Hare, raising funds for St George's by walking 500 miles to Santiago de Compostela texts, 'looks like I will there on Friday'. As Friday is 25 July exactly one calendar month after he started walking, this means he's maintained a steady 16 miles a day. In fact he's probably done better than that because we know that dodgy tapas in Burgos caused a day's delay and we may reasonably presume there have been one or two rest days. So well done Seamus.

Watch this space for further progress reports!


Meanwhile some more of Seamus's excellent photographs.



Friday 18 June 2010

Seamus tops £13k

Our intrepid pilgrim, Seamus O'Hare, now over half way along the 500 mile road to Santiago de Compostela, has now raised more than £13,000 for the Campaign for St George's. To be precise, an impressive £13,345.35 (including gift aid) has been donated or pledged by friends and well wishers. The slightly lower figure of £12,451.25 showing on the Just Giving web page www.justgiving.com/verger is because Just Giving show the gift aid element separately.

Readers of this page who have not pledged their support for Seamus - even if they are supporting the Campaign for St George's in other ways - are warmly invited to add to the current total. Wouldn't it be lovely to be able to greet Seamus on his return in early August with the news that his pilgrimage had raised more than £20,000?

Thursday 17 June 2010

Site meeting

Each month there is a site meeting involving all those concerned with the work currently going on in St George's. This involves the architect and his consultants, the contractor and subcontractors and ourselves and provides us with an opportunity to review progress over the past month. Today we had our second such site meeting. This is what we saw:-

Mouldings stripped back to the plaster.



















Work in progress.



















Tantalising evidence that at some stage in the past the ceiling mouldings under the north and south galleries were painted red!





















A sign of the times.





















A sign (or signs) of times past



















The East Window inspected . . .





















. . . up close . . .





















. . . and even closer - demonstrating that our Victorian forebears thought nothing of adding a few improving touches to the 16th century Flemish glass they were installing.



















The organ case in an unaccustomed context.



















Our Lady of Hanover Square.



















Mid-twentieth century vandalism awaiting repair. (Forty years or so ago, it was decided to put down lights in the ceiling. Holes were cut in the plaster and roof joists simply cut through.)



















Chandelier grids removed for renovation revealing . . .





















. . . the remnants of the mechanism by which the chandeliers were raised and lowered.



















The arch above the East Window.



















The architect inspects evidence of early subsidence - subsequently stabilized and so no longer a danger.

Monday 14 June 2010

On the pilgrim road

Seamus will I’m sure be the first to agree he is no technophile. But nothing daunted, not only did he acquire a mobile phone before leaving for Spain but since arriving there has sent back a string of remarkable photos which View from the Vestry can now share with his many friends.















Here i
s the first. Santiago de Compostela must have seemed a long, long way off.











Our hero on the road.











A convivial evening.












The cathedral at Burgos where he tells us he had to take a break from walking to recover from the effect of some 'dodgy tapas.'















Latest news has him over half way to his destination!

Seamus shows the way

The repair and refurbishment of one of the most important 18thcentury buildings in London – to say nothing of replacing the organ in Handel’s church – does not come cheaply. Later posts will deal in greater detail with the current fund raising campaign. The present piece is planned to be the first of many to trace the progress of a remarkable initiative undertaken by St George’s much-loved verger Seamus O’Hare to raise funds for the church he has served for the past sixteen years.

On 24th May, a month after the repair and refurbishment programm
e started, Seamus departed for south western France to begin a five hundred mile pilgrimage walk to Santiago de Compostela in Galicia in northwestern Spain, where legend has it that the remains of the apostle, Saint James the Great, are buried.

El Camino has existed for over a thousand years. It was one of the
most important Christian pilgrimages during medieval times, being considered one of three pilgrimages on which a plenary indulgence could be earned. There are a number of pilgrimage routes to Santiago de Compostela. However, since the late 10th Century the most famous and popular route is the Camino Francés which starts in the village of St-Jean-Pied-de-Port in France, crosses the Pyrenees, before passing through Pamplona, Logrono, Burgos, Sahagun, Leon, Ponferrada, Sarria and eventually into Santiago. This is the route that Seamus is taking, walking 500 miles, stopping where he can for rest and recuperation.

By the time of his departure, more than £12,000 had been donated or pledged to the St George's Hanover Square Foundation in response to
Seamus’s appeal to his many friends to sponsor his walk. It is not too late to add to this total. Donations can be made on line by following the link www.justgiving.com/verger .