Mercury (Hobart)

‘It’s soul destroying’

Anglicans vow to fight church closure

- JACK PAYNTER

TASMANIA’S Southern Midlands will lose seven of its nine Anglican churches.

The rural municipali­ty is perhaps the hardest hit by the Diocesan Council’s decision to dispose of 73 properties across the state.

The verdict is a major blow for the tight-knit community at St Mary’s in Kempton where regular church services are still held for the 20-strong congregati­on.

“It’s very disappoint­ing,” former Southern Midlands mayor Tony Bisdee said.

“Kempton have a small, dedicated congregati­on who go there every week.

“Now they’ll have to travel to Oatlands or Pontville to attend a service.”

The other Southern Midlands properties slated for sale are All Saints Church, Melton Mowbray, St James’ Church, Colebrook, St James’ Church, Jericho, St John the Evangelist Church, Lower Marshes, St Michael’s Church Play Centre, Bagdad and St Oswald’s Church, Tunbridge.

St Matthias’ Church in Woodsdale was one of the 34 properties spared by the Diocesan Council on Saturday, while St Peter’s Church at Oat- lands was never on the proposed sale list.

Mr Bisdee said it was “disrespect­ful” to those buried in Anglican cemeteries across the region, which included a lot of returned soldiers and First Fleet convict Elizabeth Bruce Flex more buried at Kempton.

John Jones, 77, whose wife Shirley has played the organ during services at Kempton for the past 40 years, said the community would “very much” fight the decision, including considerin­g a legal challenge.

“It’s soul destroying, we’re absolutely gutted,” he said.

“Everything the church was built for, the community inter- action and comradeshi­p will be taken away.

“We need a place like that for solace.

“Not everyone can drive to another church.”

Labor Lyons MP Jen Butler said the “brutal decision” by the Diocesan Council to sell seven Southern Midlands churches had left the community reeling.

She said it was particular­ly disappoint­ing given the community had worked hard towards a compromise.

“The community tried to negotiate with the diocese and through community consultati­on agreed to the sales and simply asked that Jericho and Kempton be spared,” Ms Butler said.

“Kempton has burial sites dating back to the First Fleet, the hall is a community hub and the church is a heritageli­sted building.

“There’s also St James’ churchyard at Jericho where Victoria Cross recipient John Hutton Bisdee is buried.”

David Downie, chairman of Save Our Community Soul, maintained the church had no moral or legal right to sell the churches and said they would do what they could to help communitie­s who wanted to continue the fight.

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