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Village Squire, 1979-05, Page 14building for guests. Down the hill from the main buildings there was a mound of debris from the excavation of the basement for the big house. A groundskeeper during an earlier period has painstakingly gone about covering the mound with topsoil hauled to the site from elsewhere on the property with a wheel barrow. One of the priests seeing the mound came up with an idea. He built a scale model of the mound and using his plan planted spruce trees around the edge of the mound to represent the rosary. In the centre of the mound a chapel was built. Today the chapel, called the Shrine, provides what must be a unique facility for a guest house. During the summer months worship services are still conducted there under Father Patrick Moore, one of the priests who lived at the seminary and who, under an agreement at the time of the sale of the property to the new owners, retains a separate apartment in the main house for his own use during the summer months. The main house in the seminary days was the centre of the activities of the seminary. The large double livingroom became a chapel with provision for two altars. The south wing which had once housed the Solarium became a library, recreation area and music room on the main floor and an apartment was built upstairs for the housemother and housefather whose duty it was to teach the novices to become self sufficient on the land and in the home. The decline in the number of young men entering the priesthood led to the fazing out of the seminary. At about the same time a London -area group became interested in the idea of community living. They were, Don McArthur recalls, mostly members of the same Baptist church and may have been influenced by a young, unorthodox minister. The group held regular meetings and went on outings together and the idea, first just a talking point, took more and more shape. One of the couples in the group was Catholic and at one of the discussions about the possibility of setting up a community mentioned they knew a priest who was living in a similar community and he came and talked with them about community living and told about the availability of the old seminary at St. Marys. In about January or February of 1972, Don recalls, 14 couples came up to St. Marys to look the place over. The group met again at the building a couple of weeks later and discussed who was willing to take the big step to move in to the buildings and live as a community. In the final decision just four families and several singles were willing to make the move. It was quite a decision to make at the time. Communes were fairly plentiful and had received something of a bad name with middle class society. But these people were middle class. Most owned their own homes. Jane and Don had lived in the same place for 40 years. Most grew up in small town settings. Families and friends were a little shocked. It was perhaps, Don recalls, hardest on the children. They had their own lives elsewhere and didn't really want to move into this new lifestyle. While the adults still had contacts in their old world through their jobs which most of them kept, the children had to move into an entirely new world. Later once they had grown accustomed to the new life, many of the children didn't want to go when their families eventually left the community. The Westover Park set up was excellent for the kind of experiment the couples wanted to try. There was enough room for everyone to have his own room and for each family to have a living room. The only rules were that all families had to eat together in the main building. At first, Don remembers, the group was open to anyone who wanted to join but they soon realized that some people just didn't fit in with the kind of lifestyle the community necessitated. Choosing members for such a community was a little like choosing a partner in a marriage he says, only multiplied four or five times. The experiment worked, Don says in that members of the community got a lot of stimulation from the group, a lot of new ideas and new ways of looking at things. It was quite a change from the normal pattern of life, he recalls. It was a valuable experience for the children, he says, for them (MARSHALLS "C57 mnaVS 150- 152 OuU- ST - The Grand Central Hotel built in 18-I.;. was .for decades a welcom- ing place to spend the night. Today it is a group of three connecting shops. II'hat was once the lane for horses & buggies to reach the stable at the back is now a charming CARD & CANDLE SHOP. The original bar is now the LADIES WEAR with its handcraft section. Browse on into the GIFT SHOP, once the dining room. where till use has been made of - ;'- the charm of this old building. • \Ian}' of the original antiques are used to display imports from around the u•orld. fl1fLRSHIq.LL'S ST. fflRYS "WHERE THE UNUSUAL IS USUAL" GIFT SHOP LADIES WEAR CARD SHOP 150 QUEEN ST. "DO COME VISIT US SOON" 284-3070 12 Village Squire. Mav 1979