Sibley established an Intercollegiate University, which offered degrees to clergymen from various denominations after appropriate studies. Lloyd had already set up a similar facility in America, supported by his wealthy wife, but Sibley had no such financial backer and eventually the British university, which never made a profit, died out. Eventually through his meeting with
John Ward and the subsequent admission to the Confraternity of the Orthodox Catholic Church, Sibley found some success. An article in the
John Bull magazine focussed on the university, calling Sibley 'the most Rev. Dr. Bunkum' and a dealer in 'bogus Degrees.' A later article called him 'a notorious charlatan'. The university changed its management soon after. Sibley planned to establish a religious community and sought to purchase
Minster Abbey on the
Isle of Thanet in the River Thames, which
St Sexburga had once led. However, after the article in
John Bull, the plan fell through and the abbey went to Benedictine nuns from Germany. It was through this contact that some of the bones of St Sexburga came into the possession of
John Ward (Sibley’s successor) and the Abbey of Christ the King. They are preserved at St Michael's in
Caboolture, Australia. ==Death and Beatification==