Early years Born in London in 1903, Charles Evelyn George Cary-Elwes was one of eight children of Charles and Edythe Cary-Elwes. His father and maternal grandfather, Sir John Roper Parkington, were champagne shippers, the family all speaking fluent French. He was educated by the
Jesuits at Saint Michel,
Brussels, between 1913 and 1914, and then at
Ampleforth College, a leading Roman Catholic school in England, then worked in the family wine business until in 1923 he was clothed in the
Benedictine order at Ampleforth, his abbot giving him the name of Columba. In 1925 he professed his simple vows and the following year made his solemn vows. In 1927 he matriculated at
Oxford to study modern languages (French and Spanish) at the university's Benedictine foundation,
St Benet's Hall. After graduating in 1930, Cary-Elwes went on to study theology at
Blackfriars, London, until 1933, when he was ordained a priest. He then returned to
Ampleforth, where he served as Monastic Librarian, as a language teacher in the school, and as housemaster of St. Wilfrid's House (1937–51). He led services at the chapel at Helmsley for several years.
Later years In 1951, he was appointed Prior of Ampleforth, and four years later, was selected to be the founding prior of the new foundation at Saint Louis, where he served until June 1967. Columba left in 1968 for East Africa to conduct spiritual retreats and inquire about establishing a monastic foundation in that region. In 1968, his travels took him to
Nigeria,
Uganda,
Tanzania and
Kenya. During 1969, he taught at a major seminary in
Nairobi. In 1970, he served as French interpreter during the Pope's visit to
Uganda, after which he returned to Ampleforth. In 1972, he was "loaned" (as his Ampleforth obituary describes it), to the Benedictines of
Glenstal Abbey in Ireland, to help establish a monastery in
Eke, Nigeria, in 1974, where he served as Prior beginning in 1975. Columba was a close friend of the noted historian
Arnold J. Toynbee, who educated several of his sons at Ampleforth. In 1986, their correspondence, edited by the Saint Louis lawyer Christian Peper, is collected in ''An Historian's Conscience''. During this period he also helped to establish a Catholic seminary in
Cameroon. In his later years, he returned to Ampleforth, but made ecumenical and spiritual renewal visits to Catholic communities and clerical establishments in the
Philippines, Australia,
India, and Chile. At nearly 90, he was appointed the Titular
Abbot of Westminster in 1992. ==Death==