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Abandoned and neglected for over twenty years, this convent is now a heritage site, enjoying a renaissance. The convent was the first settled convent in the Borough of Brentwood. Mary's Convent, as it is still commonly known, was founded in 1812 to cater for the increasing demand for higher education of young women, and the West London District of the Society of the Sacred Heart was the first to offer the training for teachers and nurses that the convent was to become known for. When the convent was founded, the Diocese of Westminster had only thirteen schools, and this demand for higher education was met by the schools for teaching and a training convent which would eventually accommodate over four hundred postulants. The nuns trained in the main building in the convent, which had been constructed by Henry Methuen, the first Earl of and later Marquis of Mount. After seventeen years, it was decided to move the convent to new premises, which is when the present convent was built. It is at just the right time. Government and local councils were sponsoring expansion of the Catholic faith and their needs led to the vast growth in the number of Catholic schools. The Society of the Sacred Heart took the lead and an appraisal was carried out of all its schools in 1930. A need was identified for a further expansion of Catholic education. As a result of this, the Society organised a campaign which would result in the foundation of over 300 schools throughout the United Kingdom, many of which were situated in urban areas and nearer than their existing schools to the poverty-stricken areas of the country. In 1948, for instance, seventeen schools were proposed for Brentwood.
Mary's Convent was among the first. At the time of the campaign for expansion, The Society of the Sacred Heart was the oldest Catholic sisterhood in the world with a presence in almost every country of Europe. Its Network extended through lines of the Congo and Burundi, to Japan, Australia and West Africa, and in all, to over five thousand women religious. It was known as "Mother Kathleen's home for foundling children", owing to the first houses which were set up for them. The network was originally run by Kathleen Paterson, founded in 1836, by a group of mothers who wished to provide an education for the girls abandoned by the mother. The Catholic Truth Society was set up in 1851 by a group of women, who decided to expand this work and make a contribution to education by the care, training and education of girls. d2c66b5586