The priest at Westminster e-mailed me info re Hardy and being desperate I just latched on to Ware etc.
Hardy, Henry 1840-1918
Born: August 1840
Educated: Oxford
Anglican ministry: in Nottingham and Vauxhall
Received into the Church: 1876
Seminary: St Edmund’s, Ware as a ‘parlour boarder’ (1876-78)
Ordained: 25 July 1878
Appointments: Fr Hardy specialised in founding parishes and, as soon as a mission was established, he would move to another pioneer area. At ordination he asked Manning to be sent to the obscurest part of the diocese – he thus began at the temporary chapel, Harrow-on-the Hill (1878-91), during which time he bought the site for the church at Roxborough Park and opened a small church at Rickmansworth; he then settled at Rickmansworth (1891-), where he built the church and began saying Mass in a room at Boxmoor; then he transferred to Boxmoor (), where he built the church and founded the ‘villeggiatura’ house there for the Sisters of the Assumption, Kensington. He continued to serve Rickmansworth until it was handed over to Assumptionists, driving there in a pony-chaise. Next he served Berkhamstead, which he had started from Boxmoor, living in a tiny cottage next to the Boxmoor Convent. His final foundation was Tring, where he built a church and house.
Died: 23 January 1918, Tring. His final Mass was said there on the last Sunday of January 1918, where he had to be supported by two soldiers. He was then taken to his kitchen, where he lay for a few days and received the Last Rites from Fr Hacket of Berkhamstead. He was buried in Bedford.
Notes: Tablet obit., 2 February 1918, pp163-64. ‘Thus, single-handedly and depending mainly upon his own resources, most carefully husbanded, and by living in unusual simplicity and abnegation, he exercised an apostolate in western Hertfordshire in which he has diffused the beauty of the Catholic faith’