The Portal August 2014 | Page 21

THE P RTAL August 2014 Page 21 Newman’s haven in Scotland Fr Len and Ruth Black discover Newman’s links with Scotland Those of us in the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham know much about Blessed John Henry. He was, as a fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, an Anglican priest and leading light in the Oxford Movement. We know that he was received into the Catholic Church in 1845, was made a Cardinal at the age of seventy eight and beatified by Pope Benedict XVI on September 19th 2010 in Birmingham. But did you know that John Henry Newman also had close links with the Scottish Borders? A chance finding in a book about ecclesiastical vestments led us to a discovery about Blessed John Henry Newman and Scotland. It took us to the home of the man who brought Scotland and things Scottish to the heart of Queen Victoria, Sir Walter Scott, the historical novelist, playwright and poet, whose novels and poetry are still read today, with many of his works remaining as classics. Scott was born 1771 in the Old Town Sir Walter Scott of Edinburgh near the Grassmarket, but at the age of two he suffered a bout of polio that left him lame. To cure his lameness was sent to live with his paternal grandparents in the Scottish Borders. This was the beginning of a love of the Borders that would draw him back in later life to build the home of his dreams, Abbotsford House, near Melrose. Scott died in September 1832 in the home he had designed and built and although he died owing money, his novels continued to sell and the debts were discharged shortly after his death. In the hands of his descendents, Abbotsford House continued to flourish and today, architecture and interior decoration combine to make it an iconic building of the 19th century Scottish Baronial style. With its wonderfully eccentric collections and antiquarian atmosphere, it is a key site in the history of European Romanticism. James Robert Hope In 1847 Sir Walter Scott’s grand-daughter, Charlotte, married James Robert Hope (later ‘Hope-Scott’). It was this event, and his friendship with Hope, which would bring John Henry Newman to make extended visits to Abbotsford House on two occasions and where he left what today are second-class holy relics. In his youth, James Robert Hope, who was to marry Charlotte, had considered entering the ministry of the Church of England but in 1835 he gave up this intention and began to study law. In the 1840s Hope became, with Newman and others, one of the contents page foremost promoters of the Tractarian movement at Oxford which grew to become known as the Oxford Movement. In 1851, four years after his marriage to Charlotte, Hope, together with Archdeacon Manning, was received into the Catholic Church in London, followed soon after by Charlotte. N