
When
the plague reached the village of
Eyam, Derbyshire, England, in 1665, about three-fifths of the town's population was wiped out. But under the leadership of
Vicar William Mompesson, the villagers voluntarily isolated themselves from other villages in the parish. Every year on the last Sunday in August, a procession of clergy, standard bearers, choir members, and musicians forms at Eyam's parish church and proceeds up the road leading toward a place up in the hills known as Cucklet Dell. A simple sermon pays tribute to the plague victims and the 74 villagers who survived.
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