Clachan of Campsie
Clachan of Campsie | |
---|---|
St Machan's Church | |
Location within East Dunbartonshire | |
OS grid reference | NS6179 |
Civil parish | |
Council area | |
Lieutenancy area | |
Country | Scotland |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | GLASGOW |
Postcode district | G66 |
Dialling code | 01360 |
Police | Scotland |
Fire | Scottish |
Ambulance | Scottish |
UK Parliament | |
Scottish Parliament | |
Clachan of Campsie or Campsie Glen (Template:Lang-gd) is a settlement now in the East Dunbartonshire area of Scotland.[1] It was formerly part of the county of Stirlingshire. It is situated to the south of the Campsie Fells at the foot of Campsie Glen where the Finglen and Aldessan Burns meet, forming the Glazert Water which then flows south-east until it joins the River Kelvin near Kirkintilloch.
Schoenstatt
Originally called Ballencleroch House, the shrine of Schoenstatt in Clachan of Campsie is a place, with gardens and a shrine to Our Lady of Schoenstatt.There is a woodland walk in Schoenstatt.
History
In early 1962, Sister Xavera brought Schoenstatt to Scotland by building a centre for German Catholic residents. Sister Vincetas later joined her and they worked together for many years in Ardmory in the south of Glasgow. They worked in a large area of Scotland down to Manchester. The looked after German ex-soldiers and lots of others. After time, Schoenstatt began to grow and slowly a small family Movement began to appear. Sister Xavera had a wish that a shrine could be built, and very slowly things began to arrive such as the altar in the 1970s and then the vocations in the 1980s. Father Duncan McVicar and Father Bryan Cunningham were ordained as priests at Schoenstatt. Sister Mary-Elsbeth Owens and Sister Marion McClay joined the Schoenstatt movement with Father Michael Savage who joined the Schoenstatt Priest's Institute. The move to establish a shrine came when with Sister Margareta and Sister Patricia. The shrine was opened in Campsie Glen in 1989 and then the Formation Centre in 1995. Neighbours in the area call the shrine nowadays "The Schoenstatt".[citation needed]
St Machan
Kincaids of Campsie
In the graveyard there is a mausoleum of the Kincaids.