Dom Bede Camm, O.S.B., (26 December 1864 – 8 September 1942) was an English Benedictinemonk and martyrologist. He is best known for his many works on the English Catholic martyrs, which helped to keep their memories alive in the newly reemerging Catholic Church of Victorian England.
Camm developed a strong devotion to the English Martyrs who were being beatified by Pope Leo XIII during that period, seeing them as heroic witnesses to his new faith, who were also natives of England. Out of this, he was to publish his two-volume work Lives of the English Martyrs in 1904. While he was working on his book, he came to know Mother Mary of St Peter (née Marie-Adèle Garnier), foundress of the Benedictine Adorers of the Sacred Heart of Montmartre. She had just led her new monastic community from Paris, due to the anti-clerical laws enacted in France at the time. The nuns built a new monastery located in Tyburn, the place of execution of many of the Catholic martyrs of the Tudor period. They opened a small shrine to the martyrs in the crypt of the monastery chapel and became the caretakers of the site. Camm developed a deep respect for the foundress.[citation needed]
In 1909 Camm came to the rescue of the Tyburn nuns. The financial situation of the nuns' monastery had become so severe that they were in process of selling the property, and had already packed. He approached Mother St Peter and offered to help them with a legacy he had received from his father, clearing their debts and funding the construction of a novitiate for their priory. This donation saved the community in its early days, and the site of devotion to England's martyrs.[4] He went on to help develop the site, obtaining more relics and stained glass windows in erecting a larger shrine. It was he who designed a recreation of the Tyburn Tree for the sanctuary of the shrine, as a baldachin over the altar.[citation needed]
From 1912 to 1913 he was at Maredsous Abbey in Belgium. After the corporate conversion of Caldey Abbey to the Catholic Church—among the first of its kind accepted by Rome, at the invitation of the abbot of that monastery, in June 1913 Camm went to serve as their Master of novices. In addition to this work, he spent the next year touring England, lecturing and preaching to raise funds for the support of Caldey and of the nuns at Tyburn.[2] Camm contributed a number of articles on English martyrs to the Catholic Encyclopedia.[1]
Camm's own abbey started to experience problems during the years leading up to World War I, as its situation became precarious due to the overwhelming preponderance of German monks in the community. Thus Camm transferred to Downside Abbey, where he renewed his vows on 21 November 1913 to Abbot Cuthbert Butler. He spent the years of World War I as a military chaplain, posted first at Stobhill Hospital in Glasgow, Scotland,[2] then, in December 1915, in Port Said, Egypt.[5][6] He served with the military until the spring of 1919.[2]
From 1919 to 1931 Camm served as Master of St Benet's Hall, Cambridge.[7] During that period, he produced further works on the English martyrs and some guides to the surviving locales connected to them.[7] He retired to Downside Abbey in June 1931 due to ill health. Camm was later transferred to a Catholic nursing home in Clifton, Bristol,[2]
where he died on 8 September 1942.[4] He was buried in the monastic cemetery of the abbey.[2]
Works
A Benedictine Martyr in England: being the life and times of the venerable servant of God, Dom John Roberts (1897)
In the Brave Days of Old: historical sketches of the Elizabethan persecution (1899)
Courtier, Monk and Martyr: a sketch of the life and sufferings of Blessed Sebastian Newdigate of the London Charterhouse (1901)
Lives of the English Martyrs: declared blessed by Pope Leo XIII in 1886 and 1895 (1904)
Some Devonshire screens and the saints represented on their panels (1906)
^ abcdefgArchives of the monastic community of Downside Abbey, through the courtesy of the Office of the Abbot.
^(PDF)Archived 20 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine Hodgetts, Michael (2001). "Erdington Abbey:1850-1876-2001". Benedictine History Symposium. pp. 10–11.
^Michael Francis Snape, God and the British Soldier: Religion and the British Army in the First and Second World Wars (2005), p. 183.
^ abBede Camm, Forgotten Shrines: An Account of Some Old Catholic Halls and Families in England and of Relics and Memorials of the English Martyrs (2003 reprint), introduction at p. vii.
Further reading
Aidan Bellenger, Two Antiquarian Monks: the Papers of Dom Bede Camm and Dom Ethelbert Horn at Downside Catholic Archives 6 (1986) 11
Aidan Bellenger, Dom Bede Camm (1864–1942), Monastic Martyrologist, in Diana Wood (editor), Martyrs and martyrologies: papers read at the 1992 Summer Meeting and the 1993 Winter Meeting of the Ecclesiastical History Society (1993)