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ST. PAUL'S

PRESERVING TflM BUJLDING. QUARTER MILLION AVAILABLE. HOW THE FUND* aSb BEING APPLIEDOn January 8 of this year the Dean and Chapter ot St Paul's, after consultation with the JLord Mayor of London appealed through "The Times" lot a sum of from ££20,000 to £140,000 for the preservation of St. Paul's Cathedral. Thanks to the generosity of the public the larger- sum was reached by January 22. On August 26 we announced that the fund had passed £250,000; and donations have not yet ceased to reach us, says "The Times." The time will come when the Cathedral authorities and the .others now joined with them in this great task will be able to say to each subscriber: "Si monumentum requiris circumspice. The work you entrusted with us is done; the Cathedral is safe. But that time cannot be yet. It is natural that those who have given to any of the funds should wish to know what progress is being made with the work. .

At present the principal field is the crypt. The lower parts of the piers supporting the dome must be made se- - cure before their upper parts are taken in hand. All day and every day (undisturbed now by the Cathedral services) the workmen are drilling the necessary series of holes in the - piers and forcing into them the cement which is to make a solid core in place of the rubble, now decayed, with which Wren perforce filled in the stone casings. The foundations, it is held, may be trusted to go on bearing ;he enormous weight; it is the piers tiiat must be fortified. When this has been accomplished in the crypt, the same process will be begun on the Cathedral floor, two of the oiers having already been made secure by the Cathedral authorities before the present appeal was issued. The work in the crypt may probably oe finished early next year. Let ua suppose that, perhaps by tne ~«a or next year, perhaps later, the core of every pier has been made solid. Then will come an operation which, it is thought, may be even longer and more difficult. That operation is the replacing of faulty stones by sound stones in the masonry of the piers. The failure of the* cores has thrown the weight of the drum and all above it—of "the three domes of St. Paul's' which we described in the early days of the fund—on to the masonry, which was never intended to bear it unaided, and was rendered the more unfit to bear it by the contractors disregard of Wren's instructions about ' the proper use of iron The effect has been to split and break a number of the stones—a number which on examination (as the cathedral authorities found in their work Upon the north-east and two southern piers) may be found to involve the replacing of many tons of mas-

onry. And besides all this there is yet another great undertaking—the bracing of th/k drum with a metal hoop. . • • Worship During Repairs. A great saving of time is now effected by the ' separation of a part of the Cathedral where services may be held without interruption of the repairs. Before the works were begun on the present scale it was impossible to hold services in the din of the modern substitutes for axes and hammers; and the regular and special services in St. Paul's Cathedral take up many hours of the week. Now the high altar has been brought down into the nave a«d set up decently and in order just east of .the Wellington Monument. A few of the choir stalls have also been brought down and Wren's beautiful wooden pulpit has been set up hard by. Behind the altar boarding has been run up to the top of the arch, stained a quiet green, and hung with fabrics. A separate church, as it were, has thus been made, where as many as one thousand people may worship, while east of it the repairs go on all the working day.

All these different operations, are necessary, to the preservation of the fabric, to the worthy maintenance of the Cathedral as a Christian church in continuous use for the worship of many thousands of people, arid to its convenience and safety as a place of pilgrimage for men of all races and creeds. But not all of them, obviously, fall under the head for which the public has so generously subscribed. And since no great public work of this kind .can be too carefully guarded against any possibility of reproach it may be well that the public should know the principle which the administrators of the fund have laid down and to which they scrupulously adhere. The various works in the Cathedral are divided by them under two heads; those which are necessary to the preservation of the fabric, and those which are not. ' The former are paid for out of the fund; the latter are paid for out of the Cathedral's other resources. A simple instance will make the principle clear. The removal and the future replacing of the organ are necessary to the preservation of the fabric, because it could not have been carried ont while the organ was in its usual place. The fund, therefore, will bear the cost. But the long overdue improvements to the organ, for making which the present opportunity is to be taken, are not necessary to the preservation of the fabric; therefore no part of their cost will be borne by the fund.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19251231.2.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Shannon News, 31 December 1925, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
924

ST. PAUL'S Shannon News, 31 December 1925, Page 2

ST. PAUL'S Shannon News, 31 December 1925, Page 2

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