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Faith

You are in: North Yorkshire > Faith > Eco nuns on the run

Nuns at their new eco-monastery in North Yorkshire

The nuns swap their habits for hard hats

Eco nuns on the run

In May 2009, after nearly 150 years at Stanbrook Abbey in Worcestershire, a community of Benedictine nuns moved into a brand new, eco-monastery in the beautiful and peaceful setting of the North Yorkshire moors.

The community of nuns who have moved into their new home at Wass, near Helmsley on the North Yorkshire have a long history.

Following the dissolution of the monasteries under Henry VIII a group of young women, accompanied by a monk, fled England for the continent, hoping to find the religious life they wanted.

The new eco-monastery in North Yorkshire

The eco-monastery under construction

The great-grandaughter of Sir Thomas More was one of the group of young women and it was ultimately money from her family which gave them the financial security they needed.

She became the chief founder of the Benedictine nuns and the foundation flourished. In 1795 they were able to return to England and moved into their home at Stanbrook Abbey in 1838.

The modern community of around 25 nuns have taken the difficult decision to move from their grand and Gothic, but expensive to maintain, home at Stanbrook Abbey into a brand new purpose built eco-monastery on the North York Moors.

The new monastery includes solar panelling, rainwater harvesting, a sedum roof and locally sourced wood for their new woodchip boiler.

The Nuns are the first monastic community to relocate to North Yorkshire since the Reformation.

Foundation stone for the new eco-monastery in North Yorkshire

Mother Abbess Andrea Savage

The Mother Abbess, Sister Andrea, said that although it was sad to leave Stanbrook the move was an essential one, and they were looking forward to settling into their new life in North Yorkshire.

They had to decide how much of their five tonnes of ecclesiastical furniture and library of 33,000 books to take with them. The nuns held their own version of a 'car boot sale' to sell some of the hundreds of items they couldn't take with them.

They have also brought back to North Yorkshire a unique collection of original early 20th century furniture, crafted specially for Worcester Abbey, by the original Kilburn “Mouseman” himself, Robert Thompson.

last updated: 20/05/2009 at 16:38
created: 20/05/2009

You are in: North Yorkshire > Faith > Eco nuns on the run

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