top of page
Oratory Pic.png

A Saint John Henry Newman Pilgrimage:

An Oxford Experience

held at Keble College, University of Oxford

8-12 August 2027

About

ABOUT the PILGRIMAGE

Keble College

University of Oxford

Oxford OX1 3PG

United Kingdom

image.png

8-12 August 2027

image.png

4 Nights | 5 Days

image.png

Breakfast & Dinner provided daily in Keble College Dining Hall

image.png

Lunches provided daily in historical Oxford locations

image.png

Prices starting at £2195

image.png

30 June 2027

image.png

Reside at Keble College.

Walk in Saint John Henry Newman’s footsteps.

Return to the source.

We invite you to follow in the footsteps of Saint John Henry Newman, tracing his intellectual, pastoral, and personal journey through the places where he lived, studied, and wrote in Oxford, England. Moving chronologically through the colleges, churches, and libraries of Oxford, participants live, dine, and gather within the historic settings that shaped Saint John Henry Newman’s understanding of education, conscience, and the life of the mind. Rather than approaching Saint John Henry Newman in abstraction, this pilgrimage encounters his world directly, exploring the environments in which his ideas developed and his influence began.

 

This pilgrimage honours the full arc of Saint John Henry Newman’s life, including the experiences that shaped his intellectual development and later legacy. 

 

Participants are joined by Rev Canon Brian Mountford MBE, one of the former Vicars (1986–2016) of University Church of St Mary the Virgin, offering insight into the Oxford context in which Saint John Henry Newman lived and worked. The pilgrimage opens at Keble College, providing an introduction to the historical setting that shaped Saint Newman’s years in Oxford and the ideas that influenced his lasting impact on university life and intellectual tradition.

HIGHLIGHTS

Be Accompanied by one of Saint John Henry Newman's Successors Throughout the Pilgrimage

A defining distinction of this experience is the presence of Rev Canon Brian Mountford MBE, one of the former Vicars (1986-2016) of the University Church of St Mary the Virgin-the very position once held by Saint John Henry Newman. Throughout the pilgrimage, Rev Canon Mountford will accompany participants, offering insight, reflection, and personal perspective drawn from his years serving in Saint John Henry Newman’s own pulpit and parish.

PROGRAMME

Highlights
Program

Programme Overview

image.png

Opening Dinner | Keble College

image.png

Breakfast | Keble

Lunch | Oriel 

Dinner | Keble

image.png
image.png

Dinner | Keble

Breakfast | Keble

Lunch | Oriel 

Dinner | Keble

image.png
image.png

Guided Tour Oxford

Guided Tour of Bodleian Library

Personal Tour of University Church of St. Mary the Virgin

Breakfast | Keble

High Tea

image.png

Guided Tour of Natural History Museum

Guided Tour of Ashmolean Museum

image.png

Breakfast | Keble

Lunch 

Dinner | Trinity 

image.png
image.png

Guided Tour of Oxford Oratory

Mass

Guided tour of Oxford chapels

image.png

Breakfast | Keble

Breakfast | Keble

Lunch | Birmingham

image.png

Birmingham Oratory

Shrine of Saint John Henry Newman

Lodging

image.png

Day 1

The Saint John Henry Newman Pilgrimage opens with an evening at Keble College, established in honour of John Keble, a central figure in the Oxford Movement in which Saint Newman played a leading role. The opening dinner, Saint John Henry Newman’s Oxford Evening serves as both a welcome and an orientation. The evening is introduced by Rev. Canon Brian Mountford,  MBE, one of Saint John Henry Newman’s successors of the University Church of St. Mary.

Participants will enter into Saint John Henry Newman’s Oxford, following his path through the colleges, chapels, and settings that formed his intellectual and spiritual journey.

image.png

Day 2

Day Two explores Saint John Henry Newman at the height of his Oxford influence, when his preaching and writing stirred intense reflection, debate, and unease across the University. The day begins with a guided tour of Oxford and then on to the Bodleian Library, where his pamphlets, tracts, and printed arguments that carried Saint John Henry Newman’s ideas beyond the pulpit and into public discourse are housed.

Lunch will be held at Oriel College, the intellectual home of Saint John Henry Newman, elected Fellow in 1822. Oriel College's strong academic culture shaped his ideas on education. The chapel’s stained glass window depicting Saint John Henry Newman reflects his lasting connection to the college and his influence on Oxford’s intellectual tradition.

 

After lunch, the pilgrimage moves to the University Church of St Mary the Virgin, where Saint John Henry Newman served as Vicar and preached sermons that challenged prevailing religious assumptions and called for a return to theological seriousness and conscience. 

The day concludes with a dinner at Keble College, drawing together the intellectual, spiritual, and social threads of Saint John Henry Newman’s Oxford years and the debates that defined the Oxford Movement at its most influential moment.

 

image.png

Day 3

Day Three examines Saint John Henry Newman within the wider intellectual storms of nineteenth-century Oxford, when questions of faith, science, and authority erupted into public debate. The day begins with a guided exploration of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, site of the famous Great Debate, situating Saint John Henry Newman’s theological arguments within an age increasingly shaped by scientific inquiry and challenge.

Then on to the Ashmolean Museum. The Ashmolean Museum, one of the world’s oldest public museums, reflects the intellectual environment that shaped Saint John Henry Newman’s belief that education should cultivate a broad understanding of human knowledge, linking literature, history, philosophy, and theology.

The day concludes with a High Tea at the Randolph Hotel. 

image.png

Day 4

This day turns to Saint John Henry Newman’s final Oxford chapter, marked by withdrawal, discernment, and eventual conversion. Participants are welcomed for a private guided tour of the Oxford Oratory, offering rare insight into Saint John Henry Newman’s Catholic legacy and his enduring theological influence. An optional Mass provides a moment of reflection on Saint Newman’s understanding of conscience, authority, and assent, themes that shaped his most important later writings.

Lunch follows and then a guided walking tour of the University of Oxford most famous chapels.

The pilgrimage continues with the Closing Banquet at Trinity College where Saint John Henry Newman began his Oxford career as an undergraduate student in 1817.

image.png

Day 5

The pilgrimage concludes with a final breakfast in Oxford, offering participants an opportunity to reflect on Saint John Henry Newman’s enduring legacy and the conversations shared throughout the week. Gathered in collegiate surroundings, guests enjoy an unhurried morning of fellowship, informal discussion, and final reflections on themes of conscience, authority, faith, and intellectual integrity. 

Following breakfast, participants depart Oxford with a deeper appreciation of Saint John Henry Newman’s life, ideas, and continued relevance, bringing the experience to a thoughtful and fitting close.

image.png

Add on Tour

The Birmingham pilgrimage traces the later chapter of Saint John Henry Newman’s life, where his influence continued to grow beyond Oxford. Participants visit the Birmingham Oratory, founded by Saint Newman in 1848, where he lived, wrote, and guided a religious community for the remainder of his life. Within the Oratory, visitors spend time at the Shrine of Saint John Henry Newman, which honours his enduring legacy and intellectual contribution.

The pilgrimage also includes viewing Oratory House, where Saint John Henry Newman resided, offering insight into the setting in which many of his later works were composed. A visit to Rednal Cemetery, a place of retreat chosen by Saint Newman for reflection, provides a quiet conclusion to the day, allowing participants to consider the lasting impact of his thought on education, conscience, and the role of the university.

Together, these sites offer a meaningful perspective on Saint John Henry Newman’s later life and the development of ideas that continue to shape intellectual and educational traditions today. Lodging at luxury hotel in Birmingham along with lunch provided. 

image.png
Pricing

PRICING

Airfare and transportation to Oxford not included

Early Payment Discount of £200 by April 30, 2027

£3395

Single En-Suite Accommodation at a 5-star hotel | Meals | Tours per person

£2995

Single En-Suite Accommodation at Keble College | Meals | Tours per person

£2595

STUDENT En-Suite Accommodation at Keble College | Meals | Tours per person

£2195

Group of 5 or more per person

£1095

ADD ON TOUR to Birmingham

Reserve
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

bottom of page