Hon. Evan Morgan in California and the ‘True Cross’ of Christ

An Extract  ( with additional text ) from the book

“Evan Frederic Morgan : Final Affairs

Financial and Carnal”

By William Cross


                 ISBN-13: 978-1905914241

The True Cross : Fragments

Scoffers love to repeat the old saw that, if all the alleged relics of the ‘True Cross ’ were brought together, you could re-build Noah's Ark, but in fact, all the pieces are quite small, most just splinters. 

In 1870 a Frenchman, Rohault de Fleury, catalogued all the relics of the ‘True Cross’  including relics that were said to have existed but were lost. He measured the existing relics and estimated the volume of the missing ones. Then he added up the figures and discovered that the fragments, if glued together, would not have made up more than one-third of a cross.

Evan Morgan and the ‘True Cross’

In the late 1920s  the Hon. Evan Morgan [1] was in Riverside, California as a guest of Frank A Millar [2] the proprietor of the Mission Inn hotel.


Evan’s visit made such an impact that it features in a book published about Frank Millar and the Mission Inn:

The book declares that:-

There was the incident of the visit of the Honorable Evan Morgan, son of Baron Tredegar of England.”  [3]

 

Several tall stories are told of how Evan acquired a piece of the ‘ True Cross’   [i]on which Christ was crucified, including  one ludicrous yarn of Evan making the find in the Holy Land (  he did  visit Jerusalem at least once ). Another ridiculous romp mentions Evan hiring a whole carriage of a train passing through Turkey to convey the relic back to  his home in Britain.

 

In  fact the real story of Evan’s precious possession relates to a reliquary of St John on the Cross at Mission Inn.

 

“ Mr Morgan had arrived at the [ Mission]  Inn on a trip around the world. Wandering among the crosses of the collection, he came upon a reliquary of St John of the Cross. Mr Morgan’s Catholic sympathies were pronounced, and St John was his patron saint; he went to the curator, saying that he wished to buy this cross. The curator told him courteously that nothing in the cross collection was for sale.

 

“I must buy it.” The Honourable Evan Morgan repeated.      “ You must let me buy it.”

 

Impressed by the absence of any mention of price or inclination to bargain, Mr Borton, the curator promised to lay the matter before Mr Miller. Mr Miller replied that he was sorry, that nothing in the cross collection could be sold.

 

Mr Morgan now cried.  “Please tell Mr Miller that I will pay anything he wishes, but I must have the cross.”

 

This word he followed with a personal letter to Mr Miller, repeating the wish to have the cross at any price, and enclosing three papal rings, whose settings were exquisite intaglios cut in amethyst and topaz. Sitting before an open fire in his cowled monk’s dressing gown of brown burlap, Mr Miller dictated his reply.

 

My DEAR FRIEND:  I cannot find it in my heart to traffic in anything which you value as manifestly you this cross. Take it, with my appreciation of you.

I am returning the three papal rings, which I am sure that you value more than I would know how to do.

Sincerely yours, 

 

FRANK  A MILLER”[4]

 

Another  teller of the same tale suggests that on Evan’s visit to Riverside he      “ secured a relic of the ‘True Cross’  in exchange for a Cross which he [ Evan] procured from the Belgian battlefields and had blessed by the late Cardinal Mercier”. [5]

 There is nothing in Evan’s last will and testament  or in the Tredegar Archives to indicate what became of the Cross gifted by Frank A Miller.

At Honeywood House, Rowhook, near Dorking ( where Evan died in 1949) a small private chapel was maintained.  Whilst some reference can be found to religious artifacts in the disposal of the contents of the chapel  by Evan’s Executors no item such as this gift  of  a Cross was described as existent.




 


[1] Hon. Evan Frederic Morgan ( 1893-1949). The last Viscount Tredegar of Tredegar Park, Newport, South Wales, UK

[2] Frank A Miller( 1858-1935) . Owner and developer of Mission Inn Hotel

[3] Gale, Zona. ‘Frank Miller of Mission Inn.’  D Appleton-Century company. (1938).

[4] Ibid.

[5] Advocate ( Melbourne), Vic. National Library of Australia. 18 August 1927.  NB Désiré-Félicien-François-Joseph Mercier (21 November 1851 – 23 January 1926) was a Belgian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Mechelen from 1906 until his death, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1907. Mercier is noted for his staunch resistance to the German occupation of 1914–1918.

 Any queries please contact William Cross by e-mail        williecross@virginmedia.com