In September 1947, Richard Howard visited
Kiel and presented a cross made from medieval nails found in the ruins of Coventry Cathedral to
the church of St Nikolai; in return, Howard was presented with a stone from the ruins of the German church. Over subsequent years, hundreds of nail crosses have been given to various organisations, originally using medieval nails from the old cathedral but more recently using modern replicas. In many places the Coventry Cross of Nails is mounted on a wall, or displayed on an altar. The recipients of nail crosses from Coventry were brought together in 1974 to form an
ecumenical "Community of the Cross of Nails", developed by
Bill Williams, Provost at Coventry Cathedral from 1958 to 1981. The network of over 200 organisations in 45 countries shares a commitment to peace, justice and reconciliation. It includes dozens of churches in Germany, including the
Dresden Frauenkirche, the
Garrison Church in Potsdam, and
Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church and
Chapel of Reconciliation (Kapelle der Versöhnung) in Berlin, and in other cities in the UK and elsewhere. At many, the Coventry Litany of Reconciliation is recited each Friday; the short prayer was written by Canon Joseph Poole in 1958. A Coventry Cross of Nails was on board the
Type 42 destroyer during the
Falklands War, sunk with the ship and later salvaged by
Royal Navy divers. It was returned to Coventry Cathedral, kept by the next , a
Type 22 frigate, from 1988 until she was decommissioned in 2002, and later presented to the
Type 45 destroyer , which is affiliated to Coventry. ==Gallery==