Kelham Theological College, near Newark in Nottinghamshire, was the mother house from 1903 until it closed in 1974. SSM boasted 85 members at its high point in 1961, and in 1969 Kelham had 76 students, more than any other theological college in the Church of England at the time.
Kelham Hall had been built between 1859 and 1862 by
Sir George Gilbert Scott, the architect of
St Pancras Station, with which it shares the same
Gothic style. From 1903 it served as the theological college, and the Society of the Sacred Mission added a great domed chapel, completed and dedicated in 1928. The chapel is almost square in shape, dominated architecturally by the great central dome (62 feet across and 68 feet high), which is the second largest concrete dome in England. Kelham parish church is located immediately adjacent to the hall. Here professed members of the community, novices, and students (associates) studying for ordination lived, worshipped and worked together, a unique arrangement in any theological college. The lifestyle, for both monks and students, was simple. The Hall had no lighting except oil lamps, no heating except open fires, and no water supply above the ground floor. However, it boasted ample space, with accommodation for up to 100 students, and extensive gardens and playing fields. Kelham remained the mother house of the Society for seventy years.Fr Kelly had not really intended to start a religious community, but rather to train men for the new Korean Mission. Quite quickly he took up training priests for the Church in England, and formed a community of priests and lay-brothers as the best way of doing it. He himself was a bit of an academic failure, and he thought that the clergy of his generation spent too much of their time studying theology in the atmosphere of the universities. He viewed the move of the Bishops to restrict ordination to graduates as very foolish. But he was quite sure that men from non-academic, ‘working class’ backgrounds needed a formation which was demanding and rigorous: he aimed to teach his students to think, to do their theology, and not just to learn a series of ‘correct’ answers to be trotted out in sermons. So the life he created was all-embracing: Mass and the daily Office, lectures, housework, manual work – even sport – all were part of the day to day life of the College. Students lived alongside the Community, not in a separate building, and the Kelham way often saw senior tutors sweeping corridors and washing up under the direction of their students.The Society survived a constitutional crisis in 1920 and the college continued to grow for the next forty years. A succession of visitors made their way to Kelham in what has been described as its ‘Golden Age’. These included
T.S. Eliot and
Dietrich Bonhoeffer. The Society also fostered theologians, educators and writers such as
Gabriel Hebert,
David Jenks, Reginald Tribe and
George Every. By the mid-1960s, in common with other religious institutions, numbers had declined at Kelham and it was closed as a theological college in 1972. The closure of Kelham brought to an end the Society’s work of training priests through the theological college system. Consequently the charism of SSM had to be reconsidered against the background of the challenges facing the Society after the loss of the natural recruiting ground for membership that had been provided by Kelham. Today, Kelham Hall is a luxury wedding and events venue and a grade I
listed building, with the associated monastic buildings of 1927-1929, including the chapel, being grade II listed. ==Priories==