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Fr Michael Dennehy
Parish House, 53 Leigh Road,
Eastleigh, SO50 9DF
023 8061 2430 -
mdennehy@portsmouthdiocese.org.uk
Parish Office for St Edward, St Swithun Wells and Holy Cross
Parish Co-ordinator, Pauline Parsons
191/193 Winchester Road,
Chandlers Ford, SO53 2DU
023 8027 3882 -
3rivers@portsmouthdiocese.org.uk

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Welcome to St Edward the Confessor
Within the 3 Rivers Pastoral Area, the church of St Edward the
Confessor serves the Roman Catholic worshiping community living in Chandler's
Ford area.
> Sunday Readings -
in 13 languages
Would you like to find out about The Catholic Faith…?
..then come to Journey in Faith Thursday 18th September (and
every Thursday at )
For further information contact: Fr Michael Dennehy 023 80612430
Deacon Paul Owen 023 80254806
R. C. I. A. Rite of Christian Initiation for
Adults
Our Parish Priest is Father Michael Dennehey who
also serves our sister churches of Holy Cross in Eastleigh and St
Swithun Wells in Fair Oak.
Click here
for a pictorial tour of St Edward the Confessor |
History of this Church
St Edward the Confessor church was
erected through the generosity of Mrs Edward Christian, the American
born wife of the Lord of the Manor of Otterbourne, and consecrated
on 10th March 1938 by Bishop Cotter. It served as a Mass
Centre until the appointment of Fr Frank Scantlebury in April 1966.
Since then, the parish has been served by Frs Edward Conway, Peter
Wilkie, Tony Cashman, Robin Sanders and Tony Sitti from Thailand.
The church was doubled in size and cloister rooms added in 1988/89.
Other Catholic Churches with the same name:
| About our Patron Saint - St Edward
the Confessor - Feast Day is 13th October St.
Edward the Confessor, King of England (1004-1066) Edward was
the eldest son of King Aethelred the Unred by his second
wife, Emma of Normandy. He had six elder half-brothers, so
the chances of his inheriting the throne must have been
thought slim during his childhood. It became all the more
unlikely because of the Danish Conquest of England in 1016,
when Edward was twelve. King Aethelred died the same year
and Edward widowed mother married the Danish conqueror,
Canute the Great, not long afterward. The little prince's
parentage, however, made it advisable for him to remain at
his uncle’s court in Normandy. After Canute's death in 1035,
the English succession was disputed between the late king’s
two sons by his two wives: Harold Harefoot the son of
Aelfgitha of Northampton and Hardicanute the son of Emma.
Edward made a play for the throne himself, leading an
unsuccessful raid on Southampton, while his younger brother,
Alfred, landed in England in 1036; but Emma’s English sons
received no support from their mother and poor Alfred was
even murdered for his trouble. Harold Harefoot established
himself as King, and Hardicanute later succeeded him. The
latter quickly became unpopular amongst the English
ealdormen and, in 1041, Edward was able to return to England
and be recognised as his half-brother's heir. He succeeded
him after Hardicanute’s sudden death the following year.
Edward tight control of England was largely due to the
powerful family of Earl Godwin of Wessex. Several of his
sons became earls and Edward married his daughter, Edith, in
1045. However advantageous this alliance may have been at
the time, it is likely that Edward actually harboured a
deep-felt grudge against Godwin who had been implicated in
the murder of the King's brother. Edward brought many
friends from Normandy to England, notably Robert of Jumieges,
to whom he gave the diocese of London. In 1050, the King
favoured Jumieges over another of the Godwin clan as
Archbishop of Canterbury, subsequently allowing his
followers to erect castles in the earldoms of Godwin’s sons,
Swein and Harold (in Herefordshire & Essex respectively).
The following year, Edward's brother-in-law, Eustace of
Boulogne, arrived in the country and set about organising
the erection of another castle at Dover, part of Earl
Godwin's own domain. The people of Dover objected with
force, killing nineteen of Eustace's men. Godwin refused to
take any action against the men of Kent and the King was
thus presented with the excuse he needed to arrange for
Godwin's exile. By 1052, however, Godwin staged a come-back
and his supporters forced the King to restore his position
and to exile his enemies instead. It was around this time
that King Edward is said to have offered the future English
crown to his maternal cousin, Duke William of Normandy.
Towards the end of Edward’s reign, the King mostly threw
himself into hunting and building. The major project for
which he is remembered is the refounding of Westminster
Abbey. In the meantime, Earl Harold had succeeded his
father, Godwin, as the King's chief advisor. In 1054, his
ally, Bishop Aeldred of Worcester, travelled to central
Europe in search of the King’s nephew, Edward the Aetheling.
He arrived in England three years later but died -
apparently murdered - almost immediately. His baby son,
Edgar, was subsequently raised at court. Earl Harold became
very popular in the country through his successful military
campaigns, notably against the Welsh (1055-63) and
Northumbrian rebels (1065). Although he may have sworn to
uphold the Duke William’s claims to the throne, Edward
changed his mind on his deathbed and nominated Harold as his
chosen successor. He died 5th January 1066 and was buried at
Westminster Abbey, which had been consecrated only ten days
earlier. Due to his great reputation for pious good works,
he was eventually canonised at the request of the
Westminster monks. His shrine is one of only two that
survive in the country, complete with saintly internee.
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