Yorkshire Post

A HIDDEN DELIGHT

One of the best- kept secrets in historic city is preparing to open its doors for a new generation of discovery

- PICTURE: DANNY LAWSON/ PA

Sister Frances Orchard, Provincial Superior, lights a candle in the 18th century Hidden Chapel, at the Bar Convent, in York. England’s oldest living convent is reopening in September following the easing of lockdown restrictio­ns.

NO- ONE WAS supposed to know it was ever there, so yesterday’s public announceme­nt to proclaim its reopening was steeped in irony.

The 18th century chapel within England’s oldest living convent, just outside Micklegate Bar and across the road from the Premier Inn, is one of the bestkept secrets in York.

Designed to get out of in a hurry, rather than in to, it bears silent witness to a time when to worship as a Catholic was punishable by death.

The domed chapel is encased within the Bar Convent, which is still run by the order of nuns who founded it during the English Reformatio­n. The signs outside give away its existence now, but inside it remains concealed by its architectu­re.

“You could walk past it without noticing it was there. It was built to blend in – that was the whole point,” said Lauren Masterman, the convent’s volunteers manager. “It’s very well known in Catholic communitie­s but less so elsewhere.”

The building reopens to visitors next Tuesday, having been closed since March, and those inside hope it will herald its discovery by a new generation.

“It has played a significan­t role in the history of York, in support of women’s education in the UK,” said Sister Frances Orchard, provincial superior of the Congregati­on of Jesus Trust. “Many are fascinated and surprised by what they read and see inside.”

The chapel, with some 20 rows of pews, is one of the finest examples of its kind in Europe, having been created by Thomas Atkinson, the architect also partly responsibl­e for the Archbishop of York’s official residence at Bishopthor­pe Palace.

The land on which it stands had been purchased by Frances Bedingfiel­d, one of 12 sisters who came to York from Norfolk in the 17th century. She signed the deed under an alias, and the “Ladies of the Bar” who lived and worked there wore dull slatecolou­red gowns to match the plain roof which concealed the elaborate chapel dome.

“They had to pretend to be widows and they set it up as secret school,” Ms Masterman said. The women continued to worship despite the ban on their religion, and the building – with its priest hole and eight doorways designed by Atkinson for a quick escape in the event of a raid – is a shrine to their faith.

The convent also houses the relic of the Yorkshire martyr St Margaret Clitherow, the socalled “Pearl of York”, who was pressed to death for refusing to plead to the charge of harbouring Catholic priests. This year marks the 50th anniversar­y of her canonisati­on by Pope Paul VI.

The building has been at different times a hospital ward, a refuge and, during the Second World War, a bomb- site after air raids killed five nuns and demolished the East Wing. The classrooms which originally formed part of the convent are now the lower site of All Saints School, whose main building is south of the city.

You could walk past it without noticing it was there. Lauren Masterman, Bar Convent’s volunteers manager.

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 ?? PICTURES: PA/ TONY JOHNSON ?? STEEPED IN HISTORY: Left, Dr Hannah Thomas in the Hidden Chapelat BarConvent; above, Sister Patricia Harriss views portraits at an exhibition; below, Sister Frances Orchard lights a candle in the chapel; inset, Bar Convent.
PICTURES: PA/ TONY JOHNSON STEEPED IN HISTORY: Left, Dr Hannah Thomas in the Hidden Chapelat BarConvent; above, Sister Patricia Harriss views portraits at an exhibition; below, Sister Frances Orchard lights a candle in the chapel; inset, Bar Convent.

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