I was reminded that she said something similar when she was first appointed, and a letter from a Mr Pierce Armitage of Aldwick, Bognor Regis, appeared in the West Sussex Gazette on 12 December 2002, headed Organ Double Fault, in response to a feature headed Historic Double the previous week.
Elizabeth Stratford thinks (December 5) that her recent appointment to Arundel RC Cathedral makes her the first woman and the youngest-ever cathedral director of music in the country. She is, alas, wrong on both counts.
The first-ever woman cathedral director of music in England was Anne Adams at St George's RC Cathedral, Southwark, in the 1970s. The Catholic cathedrals in Plymouth, Norwich (diocese of East Anglia), Sheffield (diocese of Hallam) and Liverpool have all at various times had women directors of music in the past 25 years, and the Catholic cathedrals in Shrewsbury and Wrexham still have a woman at the helm today. Two of these were younger at the time of their appointment than Miss Stratford is now. In addition, she surely must know that her own recent predecessor at Arundel from 1988 to 1992 was a woman — Catherine Christmas — who was also appointed at the early age of 24.
Great to have another young woman continuing in the tradition of cathedral directors of music in the Catholic Church in England? Yes, indeed. Historic double? Far from it. Hopes for the future? Rather mixed.
As well as not knowing the current history of the field in which she has so recently started working, it seems that Miss Stratford has also already ruffled some feathers by attempting to graft the musical approach of an Anglican cathedral musician onto a Catholic cathedral — a very different kind of establishment. Evidently she still has a lot to learn.
Today, of course, we know that Anglican cathedrals have had women as assistant organists during the past two decades. Some of those have been appointed as Anglican cathedral Organists; and very good they are too! I wonder how many Catholic cathedrals can say the same? Of the list provided by Mr Armitage, only Shrewsbury and Arundel still have a woman director of music today.