The Irish Dames Leave Ypres
Many of the inhabitants of the town were forced to leave as ‘dwelling places and public buildings had been destroyed’.8 It was therefore decided that, in case of emergency, each nun should prepare a parcel of what was most necessary, ‘lest the worst should come, and [they] should be obliged to fly’.9 At first, it was felt that only their Abbess, Dame Bergé, should be removed and sent to Poperinge for her safety. She left the enclosure reluctantly: she had not stepped outside the Abbey in sixty years. Some days later, the nuns ‘managed to gather some things, which were needed, and to get out of the town just as the guns were beginning again’.10 Prioress Ostyn, with the last of the Irish Dames of Ypres, left the Abbey and walked the nine miles to Poperinge, where they were given shelter by a community of La Sainte Union nuns. For two weeks they stayed in Poperinge until they secured transport to Boulogne.
On the last day of October, German cavalry units had begun a more concentrated attack. Over the next three weeks, the fighting was chaotic, with casualty figures on both sides mounting as the weather grew cold and blustery. On 22 November, amid high winds and blizzards, fighting was suspended completely and the First Battle of Ypres came to an end. Both sides suffered heavy losses. Germany lost approximately 130,000 men compared with Entente losses of around 100,000 soldiers. Casualties amongst the British Expeditionary Force effectively destroyed Britain’s highly trained pre-war army.11 On that same day, the nuns left Boulogne and sailed for England. After a short stay in London, they made their way to the Benedictine Abbey in Oulton, Staffordshire, in response to a pressing invitation from the Abbess. This generous gesture of hospitality reflected the longstanding relationship between these two great abbeys.
The Ypres Benedictines remained at Oulton for six months. However, they knew this was a temporary home for them and that they would have to find a more permanent one. The Mother Prioress hoped to revisit Ypres in order to recover some valuables.12 However, that trip did not happen as the nuns failed to get passports for Belgium. They travelled from Oulton to Highfield House, in Golders Green, London, where they were given hospitality by the Daughters of Wisdom for a further nine months. This community had belonged to the convent of La Sagesse, which had been suppressed and the nuns expelled by the French government a decade earlier. Having settled in London, the Daughters of Wisdom were now in charge of Highfield House, where they were looking after Belgian refugees. To the Benedictines, Highfield House seemed ‘large and commodious … [with] a little chapel in the grounds’.13 Later, the nuns ‘learned that it was really Protestant and only blessed and made fit for our use since the outbreak of the war’.14 When they said goodbye to the Lady Abbess and all the community at Oulton, they were ‘loaded with so many presents that they were obliged to [take] a small trunk to put them in!’.15
All the while, they still hoped to return to Ypres. To this end, a national fund was set up ‘with the support of John Redmond and others, to help the nuns during their stay in England and to finance any future restoration work at Ypres’.16 However, the war continued with no signs of abating and all hopes of returning to Ypres began to diminish. An account from Henry V. Gill SJ, who was Catholic chaplain to the 2nd Royal Irish Rifles in France from November 1914, provides some insight into the fate of the Benedictine Abbey at Ypres during the First World War. In January 1915, Gill made his first visit to Ypres two months after the Dames had left the convent:
At this time the convent was by no means a complete wreck. The upper rooms appeared to be intact. They were locked up and were filled with the nuns’ belongings. Notices in French were attached to the doors, signed by military authorities, forbidding anyone to enter.17
In May 1915, Gill visited Ypres for the second time. Continuous gas attacks and incendiary shells had reduced Ypres to ‘a city of the dead’.18 The Benedictine convent did not escape the destruction; it was ‘completely gutted by fire. All the inner rooms and flooring [were] burnt away. The walls still remained, but nothing else. With a sad exception, the cellars had escaped.’.19
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