Uncovering of cathedral’s spectacular murals reveals Halifax’s tragic past
HALIFAX — Perched on a scaffold high above the altar in St. Mary’s Cathedral in Halifax, art conservator Jennifer Fotheringham was using a scalpel to chip away a thick layer of white paint when she heard something odd.
“As I was working, my blade would click on little pieces,” she said in a recent interview inside the ornate basilica, which is undergoing renovations in preparation for the 200th anniversary of its founding next year.
“As the outer layers of paint came off, I could see it was pieces of glass — quite a lot of glass, coloured and clear … big patches of it.”
At that moment, the most devastating event in the city’s history — the Halifax Explosion of Dec. 6, 1917 — suddenly came into sharp focus for Fotheringham, who has been working since June to restore five, century-old murals that depict several angels and Mary ascending into heaven.