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Greenbank at the Hermitage Mystery Cache

Hidden : 7/7/2015
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
4 out of 5

Size: Size:   regular (regular)

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Geocache Description:

Welcome to this short puzzle. In order to solve all you need to do is reveal. The cache is not published at the given coordinates. You will not be able to get there.

Greenbank History

Greenbank Church celebrated its Centenary in May 2000. When it was first established it was on the southern edge of the city banks of Edinburgh; with the spread of new housing the site proved to have been well chosen. The original church building was what is now called the Main Hall, with the Lower Hall beneath, lying to the east of the present church. The original congregation of eleven people came from Braid Church and included Mr Joseph Bennet, who met a large part of the building costs. He is commemorated in the window in the south aisle of the church.

Nothing to see here.
Greenbank Church has had only six ministers in its history. The first was the Rev. Norman Fraser who developed the young congregation to a thriving 300 members by the time he left in 1913. His successor was the Rev. Dr Thomas Ratcliffe Barnett, a fine preacher and a notable writer, who early in his ministry planned a new church. The building was delayed by the First World War but, to a design by A. Lorne Campbell, was completed and dedicated on 8 October 1927. In 1929, at the Union of the United Free Church and the Church of Scotland.

Dr Barnett retired in November 1938 and was succeeded by the Rev. David Read. Mr Read became a Chaplain to the Forces at the outbreak of the Second World War, was captured at St Valery, and did not return to Greenbank until 1946. Mr (later Dr) Read’s ministry was distinguished by the establishment of the youth group known as ‘Quest’, which continues today as ‘QII’.

The Rev. Donald Mackay followed Dr Read in 1950 and was minister at Greenbank for 33 years. Under his guidance the membership roll reached a peak of around 1500 in 1964-65. This was achieved by a steady programme of mission and development, and the wide range of Greenbank’s service in both church and community remains a feature of its witness to the present day.

Mr Mackay was succeeded in 1983 by the Rev. Ian Scott, under whose leadership the congregation continued to thrive and to serve the community, both within the parish and beyond. As part of that witness the congregation undertook a Centenary Project, an ambitious programme of redevelopment which added a suite of new halls to the existing buildings and improved the amenity of the whole complex considerably.

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Congratulation to den sure kalkun for his speedy FTF.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Ubcr lbh nera'g nsenvq bs gur qnex naq fcvqref.

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)