In the middle of the 19th century a spiritual revival known as the
Oxford Movement began in the
Church of England. Those involved came to be known as
Anglo-Catholics whose aim was to recall the Church of England to its origins and to restore reverence and beauty in worship. Out of the Oxford Movement came the first
religious orders to be founded since the
Dissolution of the Monasteries by
Henry VIII of England and among these the Community of St Mary the Virgin was one of the first. The community was founded by William John Butler, the vicar of
Wantage in 1848. He and Mother Harriet, the first superior, left their mark on the community. From the start there was an emphasis on simplicity of life.
George Edmund Street designed the Convent House for the Community of St Mary the Virgin in 1850 in Wantage. Mary Ann Street became a nun in the community in about 1853. About ten years after Ann her friend
Agnes Blencowe also professed. Ann and Agnes had founded the
Ladies’ Ecclesiastical Embroidery Society which in 1863 merged with the Wantage Church Needlework Association. The community grew over the years, with ministries in schools, mission houses and homes for the elderly and mothers & babies. Other ministries involved people with learning difficulties, young offenders and the rehabilitation of people with alcohol or drug addictions. Branch houses were started elsewhere in the United Kingdom and in India and South Africa, opening up many new ministry opportunities. A notable Mother General from 1940 to 1953 was the sculptor and artist
Mother Maribel (1887-1970). Sister Penelope Lawson, a member of CSMV, corresponded with
C. S. Lewis between August 1939 and September 1963. In more recent times, as numbers grew smaller and institutional works were given up in favour of smaller houses and more individual ministries, the community became engaged in spiritual direction and leading retreats, assisting as hospital chaplains and ministry in parishes and schools. The five main Daily Offices said or sung in the CSMV chapel (
Lauds,
Terce,
Sext,
Vespers and
Compline) were streamed live on the internet until 15 December 2012, when the streaming ended after Compline, the final office of the day. On 1 January 2013, eleven of the sisters of the community, including the
mother superior, left the convent at Wantage to join the
Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, the
Roman Catholic ordinariate in Britain established for former Anglicans. ==St Mary's Convent==