Two accomplished church musicians, leading figures at the Royal School of Church Music, will be setting off from Addington Palace next month on a sponsored tandem ride to raise funds for their organisation’s forthcoming centenary.

Ready to pedal: RSCM tandem riders Hugh Morris (left) and his colleague Paul Hedley
Addington Palace, another of the former homes of the Archbishops of Canterbury within Croydon, was for more than 40 years the home of the Royal School of Church Music.
The organisation was founded in 1927 by Sir Sydney Nicholson as the School of English Church Music. Today, the RSCM is the largest church music organisation in Britain.
It became the RSCM in 1945, when it moved to Canterbury Cathedral. It was in 1954 that the RSCM moved to Addington Palace, which would be its home until 1996. Since 2006, it has been based at Sarum College, close to Salisbury Cathedral.
And it is the 96 miles between Croydon and Salisbury that inspired the RSCM’s director Hugh Morris and assistant director Paul Hedley to take on the fund-raising bike ride in the School’s 96th year.



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