Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

28 April, 2026

“The End Of A Pontificate From Hades”. By: Peter Kwasniewski.



“The End Of A Pontificate From Hades”.
By: Peter Kwasniewski.
Available on YouTube

This YouTube broadcast by Peter Kwasniewski will, undoubtedly, elicit massive reaction from certain quarters 
of the liberal Left and their associated Media.

Stand by for lots of screeching, high-pitched, reactions.

As other writers and pundits have said, this 
broadcast is a wonderful antidote to both the last 
few years and the outpouring of slush by the liberal Media.

[Editor: Isn’t it amazing that nobody, I mean nobody, 
has even suggested that “you know whom” should be given 
the epithet of “The Great” !!!]

Strange that, innit ?

A Blast From The Past: Billy Fury.

 


Billy Fury.
Photo Credit: 
David Redfern/Redferns.
Illustration:


“Like I’ve Never Been Gone”.
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

Text from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia,
unless stated otherwise.

Ronald Wycherley (17 April 1940 – 28 January 1983), better known by his stage name Billy Fury, was an English musician. An early star of rock and roll, he equalled the Beatles’ record of twenty-four hits in the 1960s and spent 332 weeks on the UK chart.[4] 

“Halfway To Paradise”
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

His hit singles include “Wondrous Place”, “Halfway to Paradise” and “Jealousy”. Fury also maintained a film career, notably playing rock performers in “Play It Cool” in 1962 and “That'll Be the Day” in 1973.



“It’s Only Make Believe”.
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

AllMusic journalist Bruce Eder stated that Fury’s “mix of rough-hewn good looks and unassuming masculinity, coupled with an underlying vulnerability, all presented with a good voice and some serious musical talent, helped turn [him] into a major rock and roll star in short order”.[5] 


Billy Fury.
Photo appearing on the BBC Radio 4 Extra programme 
Mike Walker - The Sound of Fury”, which enacts the 
life and times of rock’n’roll singer, Billy Fury.
Available to listen

Others have suggested that his rapid rise to prominence was due to his “Elvis-influenced hip swivelling and, at times, highly suggestive stage act”.[6]


Billy Fury appearing on the Russell Harty Show in 1976.
Available on YouTube

Fury was born Ronald Wycherley at Smithdown Hospital, Liverpool, on 17 April 1940. 

He commenced music lessons on the piano before he was a teenager and was bought his first guitar by the age of fourteen.

Wycherley fronted his own group in 1955 but simultaneously worked full-time on a tugboat and later as a docker

He entered and won a talent competition and by 1958 had started composing his own songs.[5]

Wycherley went to meet pop manager and impresario Larry Parnes at the Essoldo Theatre in Birkenhead,[7] hoping to interest one of Parnes’ protégés, singer Marty Wilde, in some of the songs he had written.

Instead, in an episode that has since become pop music legend, Parnes pushed young Wycherley up on stage right away.[5] 

He was such an immediate success that Parnes signed him, added him to his tour, and renamed him “Billy Fury”.[8]



“Jealously”.
Sung by: Bill Fury.
Available on YouTube

However, his early sexual and provocative stage performances received censure, and he was forced to tone them down.[5] In October 1959, the U.K. music magazine, NME, commented that Fury’s stage antics had drawn much Press criticism.[9]

He released his first hit single for Decca, “Maybe Tomorrow”, in 1959.[8] He also appeared in a televised play “Strictly for Sparrows”, and subsequently on “Oh Boy![5]


“I Will”.
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

In March 1960, he reached No. 9 in the UK Singles Chart with his own composition “Colette”,[4] followed by “That's Love” and his first album The Sound of Fury (1960),[8] which featured a young Joe Brown on lead guitar,[5] with backup vocals by the Four Jays.

Fury concentrated less on rock and roll and more on mainstream ballads, such as “Halfway to Paradise” and “Jealousy[8] (which reached No. 3 and No. 2, respectively, in the U.K. Singles Chart in 1961).


“Like I’ve Never Been Gone”.
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

The years 1961 - 1963 were Fury’s best years. In 1962, he appeared in his first film, “Play It Cool”, modelled on the Elvis films.[5] It featured Helen Shapiro, Danny Williams, Shane Fenton and Bobby Vee, who appeared with the Vernons Girls.

The hit single from the film was “Once Upon a Dream”. There were other notable performances by several British actors and performers such as Richard Wattis, Lionel Blair and Dennis Price.

In 1965, he appeared in the film “I've Gotta Horse”,[8], which also featured his backing group The Gamblers, The Bachelors, Amanda Barrie, Michael Medwin, and Jon Pertwee.

The album from the film was made available in stereo. Billy Fury left Decca Records in 1966, after signing to a five-year recording contract with Parlophone.[5]



“Last Night Was Made For Love”.
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

Having had more UK hits, such as “It's Only Make Believe” and “I Will” (written by Dick Glasser, not to be confused with the Paul McCartney song), both in 1964, and “In Thoughts of You” (1965), Fury began a lengthy absence from the charts in 1967, and underwent surgery for heart problems in 1972 and 1976 which led to his abandoning touring.[5][8]

In 1973, Fury emerged from a period of semi-retirement to appear as “Stormy Tempest” in the film That'll Be the Day.[8] The film starred David Essex and Ringo Starr; it was roughly based on the early days of the Beatles. Starr was from the Dingle area of Liverpool, as was Fury, and had originally played drums for Rory Storm & the Hurricanes, whom the Stormy Tempest group were said to be modelled on.


“I’d Never Find Another You”.
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

In the mid-1970s, Fury went out on the road with Marty Wilde. Away from the spotlight, he focused on wildlife preservation.[5]

Fury’s health deteriorated and he underwent two open heart surgeries — the first in 1972 and the second in 1976.[8] 

In 1978, Fury was declared bankrupt for unpaid taxes to the Inland Revenue. The taxes dated back to 1962, and amounted to £16,780. Fury was also forced to sign over his royalties and publishing income. 

A new release, “Be Mine Tonight” (1981), failed to make an appearance in the U.K. Singles Chart. Worse was to follow in March 1981, when Fury, working on his own farm, collapsed and almost died. He returned to touring later that year, and his next two singles, “Love or Money” and “Devil or Angel”, barely dented the U.K. chart.[5]



Billy Fury’s headstone at Mill Hill Cemetery, London.
Photo: 25 October 2018.
Author: Irid Escent
(Wikimedia Commons)

After returning from a recording session in the early hours of 28 January 1983, Fury collapsed from a heart attack at his home in London.[16] 

His manager Tony Read found him unconscious the next morning. He was taken to St Mary's Hospital in Paddington, but died later in the afternoon, aged 42. 

Rheumatic fever, which he first contracted as a child, damaged his heart and ultimately contributed to his death.[5] 

A week after his death, a funeral service was held at the St John's Wood Church in London. Among the mourners were Larry Parnes, Marty WildeJess ConradEden Kane, Tony Read, Hal Carter and Mick Green, in addition to family members, friends and fans.



“A Thousand Stars”.
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

The choir sang a special version of Billy’s Decca hit “I'm Lost Without You’. After the service, Fury’s body was buried at Mill Hill cemetery, in North London.

In 1999, a TV documentary about Fury called Halfway to Paradise was broadcast on the BBC channel, narrated by Ian Dury.

“Once Upon A Dream”.
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

In 2005, Spencer Leigh from BBC Radio Merseyside published a biography book about Fury called Wondrous Face – The Billy Fury Story. In 2008, a biographical documentary film Billy Fury: His Wondrous Story was released on DVD.[14]

On 19 April 2003, a bronze statue of Fury was unveiled by Jack Good at the National Museum of Liverpool Life.[4] The sculpture, by Tom Murphy, a Liverpool sculptor, was donated by “The Sound of Fury” fan club after the money was raised by fans.



“In Thoughts Of You”.
Sung by: Billy Fury.
Available on YouTube

Eight of Fury’s EMI recordings remained unreleased on mainstream CD until June 2010, when they appeared on a twenty-nine-track issue, “The Complete Parlophone Singles, released by Peaksoft” (PEA009). The singer’s estate licensed the tracks to benefit his memorial fund, which finances equipment purchases for hospital heart units.

Fury’s life was dramatised for BBC Radio 4 in 1994 as a play called “The Sound of Fury”, written by Mike Walker, and starred Anton Lesser as Fury.[21]

Saint Paul Of The Cross. Confessor.



Text from “The Liturgical Year”.
   By: Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B.
      Volume 8.
      Paschal Time.
      Book II.

Splendidly adorned with the Sacred sign of The Passion, Paul of The Cross comes today to pay homage to The Conqueror of Death.

It behoved Christ to suffer and so enter into His Glory. It behoves the Christian, the member of Christ, to follow his Head in suffering that he may share His triumph.

Even as a child, Paul penetrated deeply into the ineffable Mystery of the suffering of God. He was filled with an ardent love for The Cross, and ran with giant strides along this royal road.

He passed through the torrent, following his Divine Head; he was buried with Him in death, and has won a share in His Resurrection.

The diminution of Truths among the children of men seemed to have dried up the fount of Sanctity, when Italy, ever fruitful in her vivid Faith, gave birth to the Christian hero, who stands out in the arid waste of the Eighteenth-Century, like a Saint of olden times.

God never deserts His Church.

Saint Vitalis. Martyr. Feast Day 28 April. Red Vestments.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless stated otherwise.

Saint Vitalis.
   Martyr.
   Feast Day 28 April.

Simple.

Red Vestments.


The Martyrdom of Saint Vitalis. This 14th-Century 
French Manuscript depicts Saint Vitalis being buried alive.
Source: http://saints.bestlatin.net/gallery/vitalis_bnfms.htm
Author: Richard de Montbaston et collaborateurs.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Vitalis, father of Saints Gervase and Protase, was put to death at Ravenna, Italy, under Emperor Nero, around 62 A.D.

Having been tortured on The Rack, he was thrown into a deep hole and stoned to death.

A Church was Consecrated to him in Rome. The Lenten Station is held there on The Friday in The Second Week of Lent.

Mass: Protexisti.


The Martyrdom of San Vitale.
Artist: Federico Barocci (1535–1612).
Date: 16th-Century.
Source/Photographer:
(Wikimedia Commons)

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

The Feast of Saint Vitalis occurs on 28 April. Churches are dedicated in honour of Saint Vitalis at Rome, Faenza, Rimini, Como, Ferrara, Venice, and Verona, Italy, and at Jadera (now Zadar) in Dalmatia (now Croatia).

By far the most famous Church bearing his name is the octagonal Basilica of San Vitale at Ravenna, Italy, a masterpiece of Byzantine art, erected on the purported site of his Martyrdom. 

He is also the Patron Saint of Granarolo and Marittima, in Italy, as well as of Thibodaux, Louisiana, in The United States.

The Cebu Metropolitan Cathedral recognises Saint Vitalis as its Patron. A Mass to Commemorate the seventy-fifth Anniversary of Cebu’s Elevation to an Archdiocese, and the Feast Day of Vitalis, was held on 28 April 2009, with the Archbishop of Cebu, Cardinal Ricardo Vidal, presiding.

A statue of Saint Vitalis is one of those on the Colonnade of Saint Peter’s Basilica, Rome.

Saint Paul Of The Cross. Confessor. Feast Day, Today, 28 April. White Vestments.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless otherwise stated.

Saint Paul of The Cross.
   Confessor.
   Feast Day 28 April.

Double.

White Vestments.


Logo of The Passionists.
Founder: Saint Paul of The Cross.
Date: 28 February 2015.
Source: Own work.
Author: Jayarathina
(Wikimedia Commons)


Portrait: 
Saint Paul of The Cross.
Date: May 2005.
Source: Own work.
Author: Plet Philippe
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Paul of The Cross was born at Ovada, in Genoa, in 1694. As his name indicates, he had during all his life a burning love for Jesus Crucified. “Nailed to The Cross with Christ” (Gospel), he devoted himself to Preaching everywhere with singular Charity, The Mystery of The Cross (Collect, Epistle).

To carry out this great work in The Church (Gospel), he instituted The Passionists, who make a Vow to propagate The Blessed Memory of The Saviour’s Passion.

Consumed by the love which he drew from the Holy Sacrifice of The Mass, “which is the Perpetual Memorial [Editor: It IS NOT a “Shared Meal”.] of the boundless Charity of Christ” (Postcommunion), he offered himself to God with Jesus “as an oblation of agreeable odour” (Offertory) and died in 1775.

Let us, like Saint Paul of The Cross, suffer with The Crucified Saviour, so that we may rejoice with Jesus Risen Again (Alleluia, Communion).

Mass: Christo Confixus.
Commemoration: Saint Vitalis.

A Little Levity To Lighten Your Day . . .



Illustration: ALLPOSTERS.CO.UK

27 April, 2026

“Rejoice, Mary”. “Réjouis Toi Marie”. Opéra d’Images de Jean-Michel Mahenc.



“Rejoice, Mary”.
Réjouis Toi Marie”.
Opéra d'images de Jean-Michel Mahenc.
Créé pour les Nocturnes de Notre-Dame de Paris.
- séquence 1/6 - INTRODUCTION Accueil dans la cathédrale -
Poème de Paul Claudel " La Vierge à midi "
dit par Jean Topart.
Commande du DVD : Tel 0160664564 - magali.barbizon@me.com
Available on YouTube

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

An Akathist Hymn (Greek: Ἀκάθιστος Ὕμνος, “unseated Hymn”) is a type of Hymn usually recited by Eastern Orthodox or Eastern Catholic Christians, dedicated to a Saint, Holy Event, or one of the Three Persons of The Holy Trinity.

The name Akathist derives from the fact that, during the chanting of the Hymn, or sometimes the whole Service, the Congregation is expected to remain standing in reverence, without sitting down (ἀ-, a-, “without, not” and κάθισις, káthisis, “sitting”), except for the aged or infirm.

During Eastern Catholic and Orthodox Christian Religious Services in general, sitting, standing, bowing and the making of prostrations are set by an intricate set of rules, as well as individual discretion. 

Only during readings of the Gospel and the singing of Akathists is standing considered mandatory for all.

Moissac Abbey, France. Abbaye Saint-Pierre de Moissac. In The 12th-Century, The Abbot Of Moissac Was Second In Seniority, Within The Cluniac Hierarchy, To The Abbot Of Cluny.



The Cloisters, Moissac Abbey.
Photo: December 1877.
Photographer:
This file is licensed under the
(Wikimedia Commons)


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia,
unless stated otherwise.

Moissac Abbey was a Benedictine and Cluniac Monastery in Moissac, Tarn-et-Garonne, in South-West France. A number of its Mediæval buildings survive, including the Abbey Church, which has a famous and important Romanesque sculpture around the entrance.

According to legend, Moissac Abbey was Founded by the Frankish King, Clovis,[1] in person the day after a victory over the Visigoths, in 506 A.D. 

The legend states that Clovis had made a vow to erect a Monastery with 1,000 Monks (in memory of a thousand of his warriors who died in battle) if he triumphed over the Visigoths, who had ruled the area for the previous Century as Federati of The Roman Empire

He threw his javelin from the top of the hill to mark the spot where the “Abbey of a thousand Monks” was to be built. Unfortunately, the javelin landed in the middle of a swamp.


Cloisters of Moissac Abbey,
Tarn-et-Garonne, Occitanie, France.
Photo: 10 June 2015.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)


History Of Moissac Abbey.
L'histoire du Cloître de Moissac.
Available on YouTube

Historical records, however, indicate that it was Founded by Saint Didier, Bishop of Cahors, in the 7th-Century A.D.

The establishment of the Monastery was difficult because of raids by Moors from the South and the West and Norsemen from the North. 

The Abbey was sacked by the Arabs of al-Andalus twice around 732 A.D. and was looted in the 9th-Century A.D. by Norman pirates and in the 10th-Century by Hungarians.


The 11th-Century was a dramatic time for the Abbey. In 1030, the roof collapsed from lack of maintenance, and, in 1042, there was a serious fire. Durand de Bredons, Bishop of Toulouse, appointed the Abbot of Cluny, Odilon de Mercœur, to bring in a sweeping reform to counter the laxity of the Monks in 1047.[2]

A new Church building was added in 1063, along with significant restoration works. Pope Urban II visited in 1097 and Consecrated the High Altar and issued a Papal Bull, dated 7 May 1097, restoring forty Churches to the Abbey;[3] he also ordered the construction of the Cloister, completed in 1100.[4]


The Cloisters,
Moissac Abbey.
Photo: 22 February 2014.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The 11th- and 12th-Centuries were the first Golden Age, as Moissac Abbey was affiliated to the Abbey of Cluny and accepted The Cluniac Reforms, under the guidance of Durand de Bredons, both the Abbot of Moissac and the Bishop of Toulouse.

Papal support, its location on the Pilgrim Road, the restoration of the buildings, and the Reforms of de Bredon, made the Abbey one of the most powerful in France. 

In the 12th-Century, the Abbot of Moissac was second in seniority, within the Cluniac Hierarchy, to the Abbot of Cluny.[5][6]


During this era, the Abbey was led by major Abbots, Dom Hunaud de Gavarret and Dom Ansquitil, who had the Doorway and Tympanum built.[1] In the 13th-Century, Raymond de Montpezat, followed by Bertrand de Montaigut, Abbots and builders, ruled the Abbey. Aymeric de Peyrac, writing his Chronicle in the 15th-Century in the Château of Saint-Nicolas-de-la-Grave, describes these times.

Illuminated manuscripts, produced in the Monastery's Scriptorium, were taken to Paris by Jean-Baptiste Colbert in the 17th-Century[1] and are now in the Bibliothèque Nationale.[7]


English: 
Flying Buttresses of Moissac Abbey.
Français: 
Vue raprochée sur les contreforts de la façade. 
Moissac, Tarn-et-Garonne, France.
Photo: 18 August 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: Jpbazard Jean-Pierre Bazard
(Wikimedia Commons)

The 15th-Century ushered in a new Golden Age, under the rule of Abbots Pierre and Antoine de Caraman, whose building programme included, in particular, the Gothic part of the Abbey Church.

The 1626 secularisation of the Abbey caused the Benedictine Monks to leave the Cloister, which had been a centre of Benedictine life for nearly 1,000 years. 

They were replaced by Augustinian Canons, under Commendatory Abbots, including well-known Cardinals such as Mazarin and de Brienne.


In 1793, The French Revolution put an end to Monastic life in Moissac. The Abbey Church of Saint Pierre is relatively intact and is still an active Church,[8] but the outlying buildings have suffered considerably.

In the middle of the 19th-Century, the laying of a Railway Track threatened the Cloister, but it was saved (though the Refectory was demolished to facilitate the Railway Cutting) and listed as a Historic Monument. Since 1998, the Church and Cloisters have had international protection as part of a World Heritage Site, “Routes of Santiago de Compostela in France”.[9]


English: The Great West Portal,
Moissac Abbey Church.
Français : Porche de Moissac (82).
Photo: 9 June 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: GO69
(Wikimedia Commons)

Architectural features of interest include the Church’s South-West Portico, a Crenellated structure with sculpture that is a major masterpiece of Romanesque Art. This reflected an expansion of image-carving, both in scope and size, and extended the use of sculpture from the Sanctuary to the Public Exterior.[10]

The Tympanum depicts The Apocalypse of the Book of Revelation. Supporting the Tympanum, a Trumeau features a statue of the Prophet Isaiah, an outstanding example of Romanesque sculpture, comparable to the work at Santo Domingo de Silos. The Cloisters also feature Romanesque sculpture.

Saint Peter Canisius. Confessor. Doctor Of The Church. Feast Day 27 April. Apostle Of Germany. Hammer Of Heretics. Defender Of The Church Against The Gates Of Hell. White Vestments.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless otherwise stated.

Saint Peter Canisius.
   Confessor.
   Doctor of The Church.
   Feast Day 27 April.

Double.

White Vestments.


Saint Peter Canisius.
Date: 1699.
Author: Anonymous.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Peter Canisius was born in Nimegen, Holland, on 8 May 1521; he died at Fribourg, Switzerland, on 21 December 1597. He was Beatified by Blessed Pope Pius IX and Canonised and proclaimed Doctor of The Church by Pope Pius XI.

His Feast Day was extended to the Universal Church on 
24 November 1926. It is fitting that this Dutch Saint should be called The Apostle of Germany, The Hammer of Heretics, The Jerome and Augustine of his Century, The Defender of The Church against The Gates of Hell.

By his eloquent Preaching, controversy, and Books of Piety, by the Foundation of several Colleges, by the Missions entrusted to him by four Sovereign Pontiffs, he stopped the progress of Protestantism and caused Catholic Life to flourish.


Saint Peter Canisius.
Available on YouTube

He assisted as a Theologian at The Council of Trent, and maintained the interests of The Church at The Diet of Augsburg and at The Conference of Worms.

Profoundly humble, he refused the Bishoprics of Vienna and Cologne. We owe to him the first Catechism of Christian Doctrine, which suffices to entitle him to the gratitude of Catholics. He ended his days at the College of Saint Michael, Fribourg, Switzerland, where Pilgrims visit his room and Pray at this tomb.

Mass: In médio (from the Common of Doctors of The Church).

26 April, 2026

“What’s For Tea, Mum ?”



“What’s For Tea, Mum ?”
Photo Credit: GETTY IMAGES.
Illustration: BBC NEWS

Zephyrinus’s Entrance Hall Needs A Good Clean. He Must Get Perkins (Chauffeur) A Duster !!! (He Won’t Like It !!!).



Staircase at the State Capitol, Albany, New York.
Illustration: FLICKR

The Reverend Theodore Bayley Hardy (R.I.P.) VC DSO MC. The Lincolnshire Regiment. Killed-in-Action, Selle, France, 18 October 2018.




Rev. Theodore Bayley Hardy VC DSO MC.
Temporary Chaplain to the Forces, 4th Class, 
Army Chaplains’ Department, 
attached 8th Battalion The Lincolnshire Regiment, 
37th Division.
Killed-in-Action 18 October 2018.
Text and Illustrations: THE UNION JACK CLUB.

LEST WE FORGET.




The Union Jack Club.
Victoria Cross.
Roll of Honour.

Rev. Theodore Bayley Hardy VC DSO MC.
20 October 1863 — 18 October 1918.

Occupation at time of Action: Temporary Chaplain to the Forces, 4th Class, Army Chaplains’ Department, attached 
8th Battalion The Lincolnshire Regiment, 37th Division.


Theodore Bayley Hardy was the third son of 
George Hardy, a commercial traveller selling woollen cloth, and Sarah Richards Huntley (née Beedle). 

He grew up in Southernhay, Exeter, moving to London 
with his mother when his father died. He went on to London University and in 1889 attained a Bachelor of Arts degree. 

The previous year, he had married Florence Hastings in Belfast. The couple went on to have a son and a daughter.

At thirty-five, Hardy was Ordained as a Deacon in 
Southwell and, leading up to the First World War, he 
was a schoolteacher and a curate in Nottinghamshire. 

He then became headmaster at Bentham Grammar School. 
Ill-health led to a move to Hutton Roof, Cumbria, as Parish Priest in 1913. His wife died a few weeks before war broke out.


As young men rushed to join up to defend their Country, Hardy was over fifty, but felt he should serve his Country. 

The authorities initially felt that The Front was no place for a Clergyman of his age, but, in the Summer of 1916, after the slaughter of The Somme, they relented, and Theodore Hardy was sent as Chaplain to Etaples, on the Coast of France.

This was not enough for Hardy; he wanted to Serve at 
The Front and minister to the fighting men in the trenches. 

In December 1916, he persuaded the Army to let him join 
8th Battalion, The Lincolnshire Regiment, at Vieille Chapelle.

Hardy ministered to the Troops during the build-up 
to Passchendaele, dodging snipers, handing out sweets 
and cigarettes, writing letters for the Troops, and 
calming many a lost and frightened Soul. 


On 31 July 1917, the Battle commenced with an attack 
on Riffle Farm. The Battalion suffered seven Officers 
and 170 Other Ranks as casualties in this Action.

All this time, Hardy was with his men, helping the 
stretcher-bearers and bringing succour to the wounded. 

He was awarded the Distinguished Service Order. 

He continued at The Front through September 1917 
into October 1917 and was awarded the Military Cross 
“for repeatedly going out under heavy fire to help 
the stretcher-bearers during an attack.”

The War ebbed and flowed, and in Spring 1918, The Lincolns were moved to The Somme. Hardy was in the thick of it as usual, and his actions on 5 April, 25 April, and 27 April 1918, resulted in him being awarded the Victoria Cross.



LEST WE FORGET.

Citation:

“For most conspicuous bravery 
and devotion to duty on many occasions. 

“Although over fifty years of age, he has, by his fearlessness, devotion to the men of his Battalion, and quiet, unobtrusive manner, won the respect and admiration of the Division. 

“His marvellous energy and endurance would be remarkable even in a very much younger man, and his valour and devotion are exemplified in the following incidents:

“An Infantry Patrol had gone out to attack a previously located enemy Post in the ruins of a village, the Reverend Theodore Bayley Hardy being at Company Headquarters. 

“Hearing firing, he followed the Patrol and, 400 yards
 past our Front Line, found a wounded Officer. He remained with the Officer until he got assistance to bring him in. 


“During this time, there was a great deal of firing, 
and an enemy Patrol actually penetrated between 
the spot at which the Officer was lying and our Front Line.

“On a second occasion, when an enemy shell exploded 
in the middle of one of our Posts, the Reverend T. B. Hardy 
at once made his way to the spot, despite shell and trench mortar fire, and set to work to extricate the buried men. 

“He succeeded in getting out one man 
who had been completely buried. He then set to work to extricate a second man, who was found to be dead. 

“During the whole of the time that he was digging out the men, this Chaplain was in great danger, not only from shell fire, but also because of the dangerous condition of the wall of the building which had been hit by the shell which buried the men.

“On a third occasion, he displayed the greatest Devotion to Duty when our Infantry, after a successful attack, were gradually forced back to their starting trench. 


“After it was believed that all our men had withdrawn from the Wood, Chaplain Hardy came out of it, and, on reaching an Advanced Post, asked for help to get in a wounded man.

“Accompanied by a Serjeant, he made his way to the spot where the man lay, within ten yards of a Pill-Box which had been captured in the morning, but was subsequently recaptured and occupied by the enemy. 

“The wounded man was too weak to stand, but, 
between them, the Chaplain and the Serjeant 
eventually succeeded in getting him to our Lines.

“Throughout, enemy artillery, machine-gun, and trench mortar fire, was continuous, and caused many casualties. 

“Notwithstanding, this very gallant Chaplain was seen 
moving quietly amongst the men and tending the wounded, absolutely regardless of his personal safety.”


When told that he had been nominated for the VC 
[Editor: “Victoria Cross”], he said: “I really must protest”. 

On 9 August 1918, King George V presented him with his award at Frohen-le-Grand, France. The King appointed him Chaplain to His Majesty, hoping to remove him from The Front. Hardy had none of that, and returned to his Battalion.

On 10 October 1918, he was hit by machine gun fire, 
as The Lincolns were crossing the River Selle by night. 

He died on 18 October 1918, 
three days before his fifty-fifth birthday. 

Hardy was buried in the Saint Sever Cemetery, near Rouen.


The Reverend Theodore Bayley Hardy is the 
most decorated, non-combatant in the First World War. 

His Medals are held by the Museum of Army Chaplaincy, Amport, Hampshire.

LEST WE FORGET.

Sources vcgca.org and victoriacrossonline.com


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