At this time, Pega also used a piece of glutinous salt, which had been previously consecrated by Guthlac, to cure the eyesight of a blind man who had travelled to Crowland from Wisbech.[3] In the 15th-century Croyland Chronicle, Pseudo-Ingulf claims that Pega inherited Guthlac's psalter and scourge, both of which she later gave to Kenulph, the first abbot of Crowland Abbey.It was rebuilt and restored over various centuries, with an order of Anglican nuns housed in accommodation built in the 1850s and extended in 1937 for the Community of the Holy Family.[9] The nuns, after 1980 from the Society of the Precious Blood, left in 2001,[10] after which the property was deconsecrated by the Bishop of Peterborough, Ian Cundy, and sold.It has been converted into a private residence with an atrium linking the chapel, which retains the altar and other historic features, with the convent buildings.