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FATHER GEORGE HAMILTON DOUGLAS |
When
Father Douglas came to North Town in 1928 St.
Augustine’s was a pleasant obscure little church
known to few outside the Parish. When he left
in 1938 St. Augustine’s was a bastion of Anglo
Catholic faith and worship known throughout the
Home Counties. How did one man achieve this?
Father Douglas like his predecessor Father
Wickham was a product of Farnham Hostel.
Farnham Hostel was a small selective
Theological Training College - very much the
brainchild of the Rt. Rev. Randall Davidson.
While Bishop of Winchester, at the turn of the
Century Randall Davidson set up the Hostel in
the shadow of his official residence - Farnham
Castle. Randall Davidson went on to become
Archbishop of Canterbury and several ordinants
from his 'brain child' went on to make a
particular mark on the history of St.
Augustine’s especially Father Wickham and
Father Douglas.
Father Douglas had a direct and dynamic
personality that appealed to youth and attracted
to St. Augustine’s large numbers of the younger
generation of North Town. His Anglo Catholic
teaching opened up new visions and inspiration
in Sacramental worship.
Perhaps the best way to demonstrate his impact
is to merely list those things which Father
Douglas introduced and established at. St.
Augustine’s -
The
Sung Eucharist
The
Eucharistic Vestments
The
Reservation of the Blessed Sacrament
The
Midnight Mass
Benediction
The
Christmas Crib
The
Easter Garden
Incense
The
Calvary
The
Sanctus Bell
even
the Altar Crucifix itself goes back to the
Douglas era. All
this, and so much more this man gave to the
worship in St. Augustine’s and the beauty of St.
Augustine’s. But
above all he gave to St. Augustine’s a sense of
purpose. A purpose of establishing and
preserving the great tradition of the Anglo
Catholic Faith in North Town.
FATHER DOUGLAS - R.I.P.
It is with the deepest regret that we have to
record the death of our beloved Father Douglas
on September 10th, just ten days after the
retirement from his ministry at St .Michael's
which was announced in last month's magazine. It
had been growing clearer as the weeks passed
that he was becoming a very sick man, and God in
His Mercy spared him a long illness. It was my
privilege to prepare him for his journey
spiritually through the sacraments of Holy
Unction and Holy Communion; he made a most
devout Last Communion, and was fully aware of
all the prayers, joining in and making them his
own.
It was also my privilege to assist in vesting
him in his own Eucharistic Vestments after his
death in preparation for his cremation and
burial; But the greatest privilege of all was to
officiate at his Requiem Mass, Funeral Service,
and final Burial in Hillfield churchyard amidst
the Dorset hills around the Franciscan Friary at
Batcombe, which he loved so dearly. If it is not
presumptuous to do so, one almost feels it to
be unnecessary to pray for the repose of the
soul of George Hamilton Douglas, Priest - one
feels sure that such a loving and devout soul is
resting in peace, and all one wants to do is to
thank God for the joy and privilege of knowing
him here at St. Michael's, or wherever else he
became our priestly friend.
We offer our sincere sympathy to his brothers
and relatives in their bereavement, assuring
them of our prayers for them all.
I have asked Fr. Flavell, Vicar of Hazelbury
Plucknett, and a very close friend of Fr.
Douglas, to write a short In Memoriam for
publication in our magazine this month.
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