Lavinia Crosse (1821 – 1890) founded the Community of All Hallows in Ditchingham in 1855.[1][2] She was the daughter of the famous Norwich surgeon John Green Crosse.[3]
In March 1854 she heard John Armstrong speak at the Norwich assembly rooms in support of a founding a penitentiary at Shipmeadow, near Beccles Suffolk, to rescue girls and women in moral danger. Shortly after, on 9 January 1855, Lavinia Crosse was asked by the council of the penitentiary to supervise this home, as the founder wished to withdraw.[4][5]
Visits to similar penitentiaries and convents on the continent convinced Lavinia Crosse that the best way forward was as a religious sisterhood. New Year's Eve 1855 saw the inauguration of the Community of All Hallows by T. T. Carter of Clewer—Mother Lavinia and two novices being received.[4]
References
edit- ^ Anson, Peter Frederick (1964). The call of the cloister: religious communities and kindred bodies in the Anglican Communion. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. pp. 328–329. OCLC 1485084.
- ^ Cameron, Allan Thomas (1918). The Religious Communities of the Church of England. Faith Press. p. 76. OCLC 4657308.
- ^ Woollam, C. H. M. (2002). "The Sister Anaesthetists of Norwich". Anaesthesia. 57 (10): 984–994. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2044.2002.02833.x. PMID 12358956.
- ^ a b "Crosse, Lavinia (1821–1890), Anglican nun". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/56102. Retrieved 15 February 2020. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ C.A.H., Sister Violet (1983). All Hallows: Ditchingham. Oxford: Becket Publications. pp. 19–23. ISBN 0728900173.
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