1-Santa Cruz Cathedral, 2-Chapel of Our Lady of Fatima, 3-Pillar of Old Santa Cruz Cathedral
In the south-west corner of the modern Santa Cruz Cathedral of Fort Cochin (consecrated on 19 November, 1905) is the blue-domed 'Chapel of Our Lady of Fatima' (erected by Fr. G. A. Godinho on 30 December, 1949), and behind this chapel of Virgin Mary is a pillar with a cross atop, and an inscription at its base that says "Erected by J. E. Winckler Port Officer". This column is claimed to be a remnant from the old Santa Cruz Cathedral built by the Portuguese in the 16th Century. Interestingly, there is another pillar on the beach side opposite to the Bastion Bungalow which also has the name Winckler, and the inscription reads: "Erected 17 October 1890 by J E Winckler Port Officer". The pillar commemorates "the Great Fire of Cochin" caused by 'Chandrabhanu', a 500 ton vessel on 4th January, 1889.
Pillar in the Courtyard of Modern Santa Cruz Cathedral of Fort Kochi & Enlarged View of its Inscription
Local historian, late K. L. Bernard writes (1995a, pp. 191-194): "This solid material took its position at the landing of the port jetty, but it appeared to be a hindrance for the visit of Lord Curzon to Fort Cochin (1900), and was removed to the Santa Cruz Cathedral compound, as the granite column was once a part and parcel of the old Cathedral. Thus the monument of the great Fire of Cochin is now in an ecclesiastical atmosphere, an object-lesson for the adjacent Fire Service Training School". A different version is given by T. W. Venn (1950, p. 35) and in his opinion, the fire memorial was of a granite column recovered from sea believed to be from the sacred edifice of the old cathedral, and Captain Winckler erected it on the Maidan opposite to the western porch of "Marina". The Marina was the bungalow across the road from the Pilot Jetty on part of the site of the first cathedral (I believe its where the present-day Marina Restaurant is located). Venn further adds that at the time of the Viceroy's visit, the pillar was brought into the Marina side garden which then must be close to the beach.
Pillar in the Beach-Side of Fort Kochi & Enlarged View of its Inscription
The question is, did Winckler install 2 pillars, since both has his name inscribed? The columns are structurally different, the slender cathedral-pillar is octagonal in shape, whereas the beach-side pillar is rounded and the shaft is wider in diameter. In a footnote to his work, Venn (p. 35) has a quote from Fr. Aguiar who states that "the old cathedral pillars were octagonal, whereas Winckler's monument was round. Nonetheless it was actually found (under water) within 50 yards of where the cathedral nave would have been. An octagonal pillar now lies in the courtyard of the now Santa Cruz cathedral". The inscription on the beach-side pillar appears older and it has a memorial date. The octagonal pillar in the courtyard of the cathedral could still be from the ruins of the old cathedral, but the inscription on its surface looks freshly retouched. In an Archaeological Report for 1935-36, the pillar was found lying in one corner of the compound of the Santa Cruz Cathedral, broken into 5 pieces with a few inscriptions in English characters. Perhaps this explains why the octagonal pillar in the modern Santa Cruz cathedral has three distinct dark seams enjoining the column pieces.
Marble Slabs at the Base of the Pillar in Santa Cruz Cathedral
Two marble slabs are slanted against the pillar in the cathedral courtyard, which some propose as grave markers of J E Winckler! Although, the writings have faded significantly, you can still read them with some effort. The smaller slab reads "Pillar Pieces of Old Cathedral Reassembled by Joe Fernandez on 24-1-1989 in Memory of his Wife Joyce". Bernard (1995b, p. 95) adds, Mr. Joe Fernandez (d. 1991) put up at his own cost this historic monument with pieces of pillars that has been once part of the Old Cathedral, and lying in the compound for years, in memory of his wife Joyce (d. 1988). The larger slab is mainly a short history of Cochin, also installed by Mr. Fernandez. On the other hand, Captain Joseph Ethelbert Winckler, the Port Officer of Cochin at the time of the Great Fire, died on 15 September 1913 at the age of 81, and was buried in the Dutch Cemetery. In fact, his burial is said to be last in the Dutch Cemetery of Fort Cochin.
References
Bernard K L (1995a)-Flashes of Kerala History
Bernard K L (1995b)-History of Fort Cochin
Venn, T W (1950)-Cochin-Malabar. Palms and Pageants
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