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George Haydock

George Haydock (born 1556; executed at Tyburn, 12 February 1584) was an English Roman Catholic priest. He is a Catholic martyr, beatified in 1987. He is not to be confused with his relative, also a priest, George Leo Haydock (1774–1849).

Blessed

George Haydock
Plaque honouring Blessed George Haydock in St. Andrew's & Blessed George Haydock's Catholic Church, Cottam, Lancashire, UK.
Martyr
Bornc. 1556
Cottam Hall, Preston, Lancashire, England
Died12 February 1584
Tyburn, London, England
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II
Feast12 February (individual with companions)
22 November (together with Eighty-five martyrs of England and Wales)

Life

He was the youngest son of Evan Haydock of Cottam Hall near Preston, Lancashire, and Helen, daughter of William Westby of Mowbreck Hall, Lancashire. After his wife died, Evan Haydock took up studies at the English College, Douai, and was ordained. He returned to England, where he worked for some years before becoming agent or procurator of the college. His sons Richard and George followed him to Douai. Richard became a doctor of divinity in Rome.[1]

From Douai, George Haydock went to the Rome. He was ordained priest (apparently at Rheims), 21 December 1581.[2]

He arrived in England in mid-January 1582 and was arrested around 4 February while visiting an old acquaintance named Hawkinson. In the five years since they'd last met, Hawkinson, a former Catholic, had apostatised and having then encountered Haydock in London, informed the priest hunters Norton and Sledd.[3]

Haydock spent a year and three months in confinement in the Tower of London, suffering from a malarial fever he first contracted in the early summer of 1581 when visiting the seven churches of Rome. About May 1583, though he remained in the Tower, his imprisonment was relaxed to "free custody", and he was able to administer the Sacraments to his fellow-prisoners. During the first period of his captivity he was accustomed to decorate his cell with the name and arms of the Pope scratched or drawn in charcoal on the door or walls, and through his career he remained faithful to the spiritual authority of the Papacy.[2]

 
Cottam: St. Andrew's & Blessed George Haydock's Catholic Church. Built during the Recusant era in 1790 and still in operation. Haydock's name was added after his beatification in 1987.

On 16 January 1584, he and other priests imprisoned in the Tower were examined at the Guildhall by the recorder, touching their beliefs. He frankly confessed, with reluctance, that he was eventually obliged to declare his treason in claiming that the queen was a heretic, and so seal his fate.[2]

On 5 February 1584, he was indicted with James Fenn, a Somersetshire man, formerly fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, William Deane who had been ordained priest the same day as himself, and six other priests, for having conspired against the queen at Rheims, 23 September 1581, agreeing to come to England, 1 October, and setting out for England, 1 November. In point of fact he arrived at Rheims on 1 November 1581.

On the same 5 February two further indictments were brought, the one against Thomas Hemerford, a Dorsetshire man, sometime scholar of St John's College, Oxford, the other against John Munden, a Dorsetshire man, sometime fellow of New College, Oxford, John Nutter, a Lancashire man, sometime scholar of St John's College, Cambridge, and two other priests. The next day, St Dorothy's Day, Haydock, Fenn, Hemerford, Munden, and Nutter were brought to the bar and pleaded not guilty.

Haydock had for a long time shown a great devotion to St Dorothy, and was accustomed to commit himself and his actions to her daily protection. It may be that he first entered the college at Douai on that day in 1574–5, but this is uncertain. The Concertatio Ecclesiae says he was arrested on this day in 1581–2, but the Tower bills state that he was committed to the Tower on the 5th, in which case he was arrested on the 4th. On Friday the 7th, all five were found guilty, and sentenced to death. The other four were committed in shackles to "the pit" in the Tower. Haydock, perhaps in case he should die by a natural death, was sent back to his old quarters.

Thomas Hemerford

Blessed

Thomas Hemerford
 
Martyr
Bornc. 1553
Dorsetshire, England
Died12 February 1584 (aged 30 - 31)
Tyburn, London, England
Honored inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI
Feast12 February

Thomas Hemerford was born about 1553 in Dorsetshire, and studied at St John's College, Oxford. On 30 June 1575 he obtained a Bachelor of Civil Law degree from Hart Hall.[4] In October 1580 he entered the English College at Rome. Hemerford is described as "a short man with a dark beard, severe of look but of a sweet disposition".[5]

Ordained in Rheims in March 1583, he arrived in Hampshire in June.[6] He was obliged to stay in a village while the blacksmith replaced a shoe on his horse, and a passerby denounced him as the priest who had preached in the barn. He was imprisoned at Winchester and then brought to the Marshalsea where he was indicted for conspiring with John Mundyn for the death of the Queen.[7] From there he was committed to the Tower. Hemerford was tried and found guilty, despite a defective indictment, on 7 February 1584, and hanged, draw, and quartered at Tyburn on 12 February.[8]

John Mundyn

John Mundyn or Munden was born in the Manor of Coltley in Dorset. He entered Winchester College in 1555 at the age of twelve, and the attended New College, Oxford, but was deprived for failing to communicate since the accession of Elizabeth. He then became for a time a schoolmaster in Dorset. In 1580 he left to study civil law at Douai, then at Rheims. In October 1581 he entered the English College in Rome. By June 1582 he was back at Rheims and left for the English Mission the following August.[9]

In February 1583, while riding from Winchester to London, he happened on Hounslow Heath a magistrate from Dorset who recognised him. Mundyn was then arrested. Walsingham was so dissatisfied with Mundyn's answers when questioned that he gave the priest a blow to the face that affected Mundyn's hearing for several days.[10] Mundyn was remanded to the Broad Arrow Tower at the Tower of London. Mundyn was tried for conspiring against the Queen and condemned on 6 February 1584.

James Fenn and Thomas Hemerford were beatified by Pope Pius XI in December 1929. Their feast day is 12 February.[11]

Blessed

John Munden
 
Martyr
Bornc. 1543
Manor of Coltley in Dorset
Died12 February 1584 (aged 41 - 42)
Tyburn, London, England
Honored inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI
Feast12 February

Death

Early on Wednesday the 12th the five priests were drawn to Tyburn on hurdles; Haydock, being probably the youngest and certainly the weakest in health, was the first to suffer. All were hung, cut down before dead, and dismembered alive.[12]

See also

Further reading

  • A biography of James Fenn from Holy Ghost Catholic Church, Yeovil

References

  1. ^ Challoner, Richard. Memoirs of Missionary Priests, Thomas Richardson & son, 1843, p. 155  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. ^ a b c Wainewright, John. "Ven. George Haydock." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 25 March 2016
  3. ^ Burton, Edwin Hubert; Pollen, John Hungerford (1914). Lives of the English martyrs. Kelly - University of Toronto. London; New York; Longmans, Green and Co.
  4. ^ Pollen, John Hungerford (1891). Acts of English Martyrs Hitherto Unpublished. Burns and Oates.
  5. ^ Burton and Pollen, p.72
  6. ^ "Beati Tommaso Hemmerford, Giacomo Fenn, Giovanni Nutter e Giovanni Munden su santiebeati.it". Santiebeati.it. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  7. ^ Pollen, John Hungerford; Catholic Record Society (Great Britain) (1908). Unpublished documents relating to the English martyrs. Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. London : Privately printed for the Society by J. Whitehead & Son, Leeds.
  8. ^ Challoner, p. 167
  9. ^ Burton and Pollen, p.95
  10. ^ Burton and Pollen, p.98
  11. ^ Bunson, Matthew et al., "Thomas Hemerford", Our Sunday Visitor's Encyclopedia of Saints, OSV Publishing, 2003 ISBN 9781931709750
  12. ^ Burton and Pollen, p.75
Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Ven. George Haydock". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. The entry, written by John Bannerman Wainewright, cites:

george, haydock, born, 1556, executed, tyburn, february, 1584, english, roman, catholic, priest, catholic, martyr, beatified, 1987, confused, with, relative, also, priest, george, haydock, 1774, 1849, blessedplaque, honouring, blessed, andrew, blessed, catholi. George Haydock born 1556 executed at Tyburn 12 February 1584 was an English Roman Catholic priest He is a Catholic martyr beatified in 1987 He is not to be confused with his relative also a priest George Leo Haydock 1774 1849 BlessedGeorge HaydockPlaque honouring Blessed George Haydock in St Andrew s amp Blessed George Haydock s Catholic Church Cottam Lancashire UK MartyrBornc 1556Cottam Hall Preston Lancashire EnglandDied12 February 1584Tyburn London EnglandVenerated inRoman Catholic ChurchBeatified22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul IIFeast12 February individual with companions 22 November together with Eighty five martyrs of England and Wales Contents 1 Life 2 Thomas Hemerford 3 John Mundyn 4 Death 5 See also 6 Further reading 7 ReferencesLife EditHe was the youngest son of Evan Haydock of Cottam Hall near Preston Lancashire and Helen daughter of William Westby of Mowbreck Hall Lancashire After his wife died Evan Haydock took up studies at the English College Douai and was ordained He returned to England where he worked for some years before becoming agent or procurator of the college His sons Richard and George followed him to Douai Richard became a doctor of divinity in Rome 1 From Douai George Haydock went to the Rome He was ordained priest apparently at Rheims 21 December 1581 2 He arrived in England in mid January 1582 and was arrested around 4 February while visiting an old acquaintance named Hawkinson In the five years since they d last met Hawkinson a former Catholic had apostatised and having then encountered Haydock in London informed the priest hunters Norton and Sledd 3 Haydock spent a year and three months in confinement in the Tower of London suffering from a malarial fever he first contracted in the early summer of 1581 when visiting the seven churches of Rome About May 1583 though he remained in the Tower his imprisonment was relaxed to free custody and he was able to administer the Sacraments to his fellow prisoners During the first period of his captivity he was accustomed to decorate his cell with the name and arms of the Pope scratched or drawn in charcoal on the door or walls and through his career he remained faithful to the spiritual authority of the Papacy 2 Cottam St Andrew s amp Blessed George Haydock s Catholic Church Built during the Recusant era in 1790 and still in operation Haydock s name was added after his beatification in 1987 On 16 January 1584 he and other priests imprisoned in the Tower were examined at the Guildhall by the recorder touching their beliefs He frankly confessed with reluctance that he was eventually obliged to declare his treason in claiming that the queen was a heretic and so seal his fate 2 On 5 February 1584 he was indicted with James Fenn a Somersetshire man formerly fellow of Corpus Christi College Oxford William Deane who had been ordained priest the same day as himself and six other priests for having conspired against the queen at Rheims 23 September 1581 agreeing to come to England 1 October and setting out for England 1 November In point of fact he arrived at Rheims on 1 November 1581 On the same 5 February two further indictments were brought the one against Thomas Hemerford a Dorsetshire man sometime scholar of St John s College Oxford the other against John Munden a Dorsetshire man sometime fellow of New College Oxford John Nutter a Lancashire man sometime scholar of St John s College Cambridge and two other priests The next day St Dorothy s Day Haydock Fenn Hemerford Munden and Nutter were brought to the bar and pleaded not guilty Haydock had for a long time shown a great devotion to St Dorothy and was accustomed to commit himself and his actions to her daily protection It may be that he first entered the college at Douai on that day in 1574 5 but this is uncertain The Concertatio Ecclesiae says he was arrested on this day in 1581 2 but the Tower bills state that he was committed to the Tower on the 5th in which case he was arrested on the 4th On Friday the 7th all five were found guilty and sentenced to death The other four were committed in shackles to the pit in the Tower Haydock perhaps in case he should die by a natural death was sent back to his old quarters Thomas Hemerford EditBlessedThomas Hemerford MartyrBornc 1553Dorsetshire EnglandDied12 February 1584 aged 30 31 Tyburn London EnglandHonored inRoman Catholic ChurchBeatified15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XIFeast12 FebruaryThomas Hemerford was born about 1553 in Dorsetshire and studied at St John s College Oxford On 30 June 1575 he obtained a Bachelor of Civil Law degree from Hart Hall 4 In October 1580 he entered the English College at Rome Hemerford is described as a short man with a dark beard severe of look but of a sweet disposition 5 Ordained in Rheims in March 1583 he arrived in Hampshire in June 6 He was obliged to stay in a village while the blacksmith replaced a shoe on his horse and a passerby denounced him as the priest who had preached in the barn He was imprisoned at Winchester and then brought to the Marshalsea where he was indicted for conspiring with John Mundyn for the death of the Queen 7 From there he was committed to the Tower Hemerford was tried and found guilty despite a defective indictment on 7 February 1584 and hanged draw and quartered at Tyburn on 12 February 8 John Mundyn EditJohn Mundyn or Munden was born in the Manor of Coltley in Dorset He entered Winchester College in 1555 at the age of twelve and the attended New College Oxford but was deprived for failing to communicate since the accession of Elizabeth He then became for a time a schoolmaster in Dorset In 1580 he left to study civil law at Douai then at Rheims In October 1581 he entered the English College in Rome By June 1582 he was back at Rheims and left for the English Mission the following August 9 In February 1583 while riding from Winchester to London he happened on Hounslow Heath a magistrate from Dorset who recognised him Mundyn was then arrested Walsingham was so dissatisfied with Mundyn s answers when questioned that he gave the priest a blow to the face that affected Mundyn s hearing for several days 10 Mundyn was remanded to the Broad Arrow Tower at the Tower of London Mundyn was tried for conspiring against the Queen and condemned on 6 February 1584 James Fenn and Thomas Hemerford were beatified by Pope Pius XI in December 1929 Their feast day is 12 February 11 BlessedJohn Munden MartyrBornc 1543Manor of Coltley in DorsetDied12 February 1584 aged 41 42 Tyburn London EnglandHonored inRoman Catholic ChurchBeatified15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XIFeast12 FebruaryDeath EditEarly on Wednesday the 12th the five priests were drawn to Tyburn on hurdles Haydock being probably the youngest and certainly the weakest in health was the first to suffer All were hung cut down before dead and dismembered alive 12 See also EditCatholic Church in the United Kingdom Douai Martyrs James FennFurther reading EditA biography of James Fenn from Holy Ghost Catholic Church YeovilReferences Edit Challoner Richard Memoirs of Missionary Priests Thomas Richardson amp son 1843 p 155 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b c Wainewright John Ven George Haydock The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 7 New York Robert Appleton Company 1910 25 March 2016 Burton Edwin Hubert Pollen John Hungerford 1914 Lives of the English martyrs Kelly University of Toronto London New York Longmans Green and Co Pollen John Hungerford 1891 Acts of English Martyrs Hitherto Unpublished Burns and Oates Burton and Pollen p 72 Beati Tommaso Hemmerford Giacomo Fenn Giovanni Nutter e Giovanni Munden su santiebeati it Santiebeati it Retrieved 28 July 2020 Pollen John Hungerford Catholic Record Society Great Britain 1908 Unpublished documents relating to the English martyrs Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center London Privately printed for the Society by J Whitehead amp Son Leeds Challoner p 167 Burton and Pollen p 95 Burton and Pollen p 98 Bunson Matthew et al Thomas Hemerford Our Sunday Visitor s Encyclopedia of Saints OSV Publishing 2003 ISBN 9781931709750 Burton and Pollen p 75 Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Ven George Haydock Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company The entry written by John Bannerman Wainewright cites Joseph Gillow Bibl Dict Eng Cath III 202 cf III 265 V 142 201 Catholic Record Society publications London 1905 II V passim III 12 15 IV 74 Henry Foley Records Eng Prov S J VI London 1875 1883 74 103 John B Wainewright in Catholic Truth Society s pamphlets George Haydock James Fenn John Nutter Two English Martyrs John Hungerford Pollen Acts of English Martyrs London 1891 252 253 304 Portals Saints Biography Catholicism England Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Haydock amp oldid 1167185583, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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