Sacred to the memory ofAnd yet the statue atop the marker was startlingly beautiful in its celebration of sensuality. Originally, I had thought this to be a straightforward post about a beautiful statue, until from deep in the bowels of Ancestry. com came an altered reality: Catherine Ann Reynolds AKA Sister Mary Regis.
Kate Reynolds Fiaschi
Born Ireland 1850
Died Sydney 1913
A loving wife and a devoted mother
Rest in peace
Sister Mary Regis. Had she been a nun or something?
Both Kate’s parents died when she was 14. She was of a devout family and had been promised to the church. She was sent to live with an aunt in Sydney and joined the Sisters of Charity at St Vincent’s Hospital, where she was known as ... yep. As luck would have it, young Thomas Henry Fiaschi was a doctor where Kate was a nursing nun. This is where the sensuality of the carving strikes to the very core of humanity. They fell in love, eloped, and were excommunicated. Kate was the only nun to have ever left the Sisters of Charity.
They had established a vineyard at Sackville called ‘Tizzana’ which Kate ran whilst Thomas Henry was overseas in both the Abyssinian and Boer Wars. Yet their address upon her death was Darling Point, so theirs was a most comfortable existence in terms of goods and chattels.
In the arms of an Angel, fly away from here
From this dark, cold hotel room, and the endlessness that you fear
You are pulled from the wreckage of your silent reverie
You're in the arms of an Angel; may you find some comfort here.
I am indebted to Jonathan Auld's 2005 paper for the 'Hawkesbury Crier' for the unlocking of the 'AKA Sister Mary Regis' reference that I discovered deep within the heart of Ancestry.com.
This is my contribution to the Taphophile Tragics community. |
36 comments:
What a touching and lovely post, Julie!
Julie, I love this post. Thank you for all the info and the beautiful images and song. It is a gorgeous and moving statue.
Amazing what stories we can find online today. The statues are as you say beautiful and the story intriguing.
Great pictures and great post! Very interesting story.
Fantastic! Love the angles you've chosen to shown us the sculpture and also the cropping on the larger photos. Great post, Julie!
Jose: none of these shots are cropped. I was mesmerised and took, shall we say, a few!
Very interesting story and intriguing monument.
Amazing detective work and a great and interesting post. The sculpture is very sensual and rather lovely.
That's a beautiful and moving statue and quite different to the usual angels that you see as markers. I really like your composition and perspective in the top shot.
You are a good researcher, Julie!
I somehow feel comforted that when she died she was at least living "a comfortable existence".
Absolutely gorgeous!
Absolutely lovely. Great pictures. I saw the post title and immediately thought of the song. Glad you referenced it. I must congratulate you on your music tate :)
... *grin* ...
Thank you.
awww yes, Sarah Mc, is my very favorite and this one is one of her best. What a fabulous story to go with such a strikingly beautiful statue!! Its almost overpowering----
This kind of cemetery is endlessly fascinating. The photos remind me of Recoleta Cemetery in Buenos Aires. St. Louis Cemetery in New Orleans and Père Lachaise in Paris. Lovely images.
I thrill to find surprises like this along the way! Incredible that you turned up a rare, excommunicated nun! But I have one more question! Who carved - or commissioned to carve - such a statue that seems to mix the sacred and the secular? It would hardly be the Sisters of Charity and yet someone close to them? Close to one of them? Or was it Thomas who may have commissioned the statue - if he died after Kate? Intriguing story! Love it!
A magnificent post Julie. The statue is remarkable.
Wow, what an amazinging momument and such a wonderful story behind it. Thanks so much for sharing.
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Gemma: My guess is that it was Thomas Henry who commissioned the statue, together with his children perhaps. He lived until 1927. What I did not include in my story, is that 18 months after the death of Kate, he remarried to a lass 33 years his junior and sired another 5 children. He died aged 73 with 11 children ranging in age from 50 to 4. I have my own thoughts on that second marriage, but it is mere conjecture.
I had written a long comment when blogger did strange, couldn't use my mouse anymore and had to close the computer. It disappeared! Well again, I like your post very much, it reads like a novel and listened to the nice music. Then I read your last comment, what a shame, he remarried and started a family all over again!
julie, these are such moving images. you are amazing.
Great piece of research, when you find a memorial like that you just know there will be quite a story behind it. Your pictures certain do justice to a beautiful sculpture.
I was very moved by your story.It would make a fantastic film!!! The
sculpture is amazingly sensuous.
Great post as always!
What wonderful information you've imparted in your post. Thanks for all that work!
11 children. hmmm.
but the angel is amazing, and very beautifully pictured.
Such a beautiful, bittersweet story - and sculpture.
Stunning and beautiful Julie. You have captured the statue and what it conveys so well that it jumps off the screen. Thank you also for all the research; such a wonderful heartfelt story to match the visuals you have here.
What a compelling post! I can tell that the passionate strength of the statue inspired research into what is a remarkable story. Wow.
Great post, Julie. Like your photos a lot.
Gosh you dig up (oops) some interesting stories about the deceased. It is a beautifully balanced sculpture.
That statue is so different I am not surprised at you wanting to know more ... but your ability to find more is amazing.
When I am in cemeteries I generally take in the surrounds, maybe a headstone or two but not the detail like you do. It's a talent.
That statue is achingly beautiful. The post is fab! Top detective work, too!
Can you imagine, 99 years after your death, so many unrelated people from all over the world marvelling at your story and admiring the statue on your grave? I'd say some folks might consider that a reason to be cremated. I think it might be a case for a burial... provided you could choose the statue before you go.
Julie this post moved me deeply, the background information you found was simply amazing (that so much would still exist) and the statue indeed says so much. But how? and who? was commissioned to do the statue and how? could the (artist)? have such depth of feeling to depict this so poignantly? Who are the people who (make) these stunning statues in graveyards and cemeteries? What is the background there? How do these 'statue makers' capture the feelings so precisely of the loved ones left behind? Sorry Julie, but these musings of mine really hit me. Wonderful, wonderful post.
PS: To me it seems that this statue was not something to be chosen from a catalogue or a list, or from drawings - it was commissioned so to speak - it was too personal to be otherwise?
Kate was my Great Grandmother! Her son Piero was my Grandfather.
Thanks for the beautiful photos!
Amazing history! Thanks for sharing!
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