the beat

Shrine Mont, a historic Episcopal shrine and retreat center in Orkney Springs, reflects the grace and fortitude of an earlier age.

by Daisy Khalifa

9/23/09 7:04 PM

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Shrine Mont Virginia House

Courtesy of Paul Harris


From Arlington, it is a two-hour drive to Orkney Springs and Shrine Mont Retreat Center. Shrine Mont, a 950-acre parcel of land in the Allegheny Mountains an hour north of Harrisonburg, has, for about 80 years, served the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia as “a place apart for rest, devotion and fellowship.”
      The invitation also extends to any number of organized corporate or cultural groups that care to use this rather wonderful, if austere, complex of tranquil gardens, toe paths, cottages and balconied dorms to accommodate up to 600 visitors. And many do—Shrine Mont is host every year to the Shenandoah Valley Music Festival and the annual Bishop’s Fourth of July Bluegrass Festival, among others.
      Shrine Mont was established in the mid-1920s as a property of the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia after it was deeded to the church by its owner-founder Dr. Edmund Lee Woodward. Woodward and his successor, Wilmer Moomaw, served, respectively, as the facility’s director through much of the last century to see to fruition a vision they shared, that the complex be a natural setting for worship and reflection.
      For their purposes, they eventually purchased the historic Orkney Springs Hotel. Built in the mid-1800s, the hotel was something of an early-American resort for people seeking the medicinal benefits of the area’s mineral-rich springs. Today, the old hotel is known as Virginia House, a towering four-story, 96,000-square-foot structure, wrapped on every level by balconies. The tallest structure at Shrine Mont, Virginia House stands in the middle of 40 similarly styled, crisp, wooden buildings—white paint, black window trim, arched roofs—that descend outward to form a generous complex of smaller houses and dorms. Just about all the housing—bare-bones accommodations that have the endearing charm of a tired-yet-dependable Inn—is wrapped in the all-important balcony and furnished with Adirondack seating for Shrine Mont’s most important pastimes: socializing, sipping drinks, laughter, observation and reflection. They also make terrific treadmills for children.
      Within the stunning setting that is part of the Appalachian chain, Shrine Mont, which lies at the foot of the Great North Mountain, feels sunken, as if in the heart of the Alleghenies. Look to the sky and you’ll understand that the grounds are surrounded by a measureless, verdant wall, as if you are swimming in a dense swirl of Virginia’s native trees—majestic white oaks trees, cherry poplars, maples and pines.
      As you approach the Cathedral Shrine of the Transfiguration, the outdoor shrine that is Shrine Mont’s centerpiece, there is a tranquil little stone monument to the Orkney Spring, from which, naturally, a gentle flow of water pours eternal. It is dressed with a plaque that is tied to the ecclesiastic roots of the place: “The Orkney Spring, 1783, Praise God from Whom All Blessings Flow,” commemorating the life of one Georgia Moore, 1861 – 1931.
      Shrine Mont makes first-time visitors feel somewhat like the new arrivals at the professor’s sprawling country estate in C.S. Lewis’ The Lion, the Witch and The Wardrobe: Unattended, a visitor can, with every twist and turn, find something mysterious, if not enchanting. And so at dusk, in a stealthy pilgrimage from our little room in Maryland House while my daughter went to a children’s movie at Lexington House, I set out to see the Cathedral Shrine of the Transfiguration.
      It was on this tour that I stumbled upon a rather significant collection of oils on canvas in a house called Art Hall, no less. To my eye, it was a monument within a monument—a little museum of landscape paintings housed in a rustic Shrine Mont lecture room, a musty parlor of sorts, with an old stone fireplace and characteristically dull lighting, which I unhesitatingly flipped on so I could see the walls filled with art.  
     There were more than 70 paintings, and all were the work of John Douglas Woodward (1846-1924), the uncle of Shrine Mont’s founder Edmund Woodward. Thankfully, there was a printed guide to his paintings. One side of the room featured American landscapes, and the other, a glorious array of landscapes from his travels around the world. There was one painting, in particular, worth coveting, a scene on a lake with an exciting pink sky—like a Hudson River School sky, which was likely given that Thomas Cole and his peers pre-dated Woodward by about half-a-century.
      It was amusing to guess ever so briefly where and what the image was before looking at the guide and getting an answer. This one was titled Varenna, Italy on Lake Como. Moving on, I found the small and medium size canvases a joy, and the guessing game continued for a while with other beauties, including Wind Swept Road, East Hampton, and Villa Carlotta, also on Lake Como.
      But, at last, it was time to get a glimpse of the outdoor shrine before the blue twilight turned to total black. The small hike to the shrine was a dreamy little flight over stone bridges and paths that puts visitors among simple wooden pews facing the altar, a primitive handmade edifice of stone that is haunting and magnificent.
      “Each of its stones,” says Shrine Mont literature, “was pulled by horse or rolled by local people from the mountain that embraces it. The baptismal font was originally a dugout stone used by Indians to grind corn.” In the dark, it was a scene to behold—the first religious setting that felt to me quite profound, or extreme, what with its dark, sturdy authority, its Gothic spirit, the multitude of crosses, and every podium and surface made of stone, with a grand, softly curving bell at the top. As it was time to leave, I stepped into the aisle over the discarded mums from a service earlier that day, their orange and yellow color still vivid amid rocks.
      The handmade architecture is breathtaking for no more reason than the fact that it exists with casual fortitude. For those descending the hill, leaving the sacred grounds that encircle the Shrine, there is an archway—a simple affair of five thick branches mounted in stone foundations on each side—with a rectangular sign that reads, “Depart in Peace.” It’s a wonderful mantra for contemplation in any faith and frame of mind, to which I replied in a whisper, “I’ll be back.”

 

 

Shrine Mont, a historic Episcopal shrine and retreat center in Orkney Springs, reflects the grace and fortitude of an earlier age.

by Daisy Khalifa

9/23/09 7:04 PM

Latest Comments

  • Basye

    Sorry , but Basye was named by my Great Aunt Martha Basye who was very proud of her heritage and her people who helped found the area. !!!

    Posted by judi Funkhouser Knickerbocker April 25, 2012 12:00:23

  • Excellent!

    Daisy - you have indeed captured the essence of this mysterious, quirky and beautiful gem hidden away in the Appalachians! I came across the place by happenstance a number of years ago and have since enjoyed the music festival and introduced the place to friends. Great job!

    Posted by Norm Bourg March 29, 2011 10:01:04

  • WOW!!

    Daisy - you have captured the spirit of Shrine Mont with your beautiful writing! It is such a serene, peaceful setting, and I admire the language you used to capture the atmosphere. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE come back again next year!

    Posted by Alison Smith :) September 29, 2009 22:42:12

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