- Thomas Thwing
Blessed Thomas Thwing (
1635 -1680 ) was an English Catholic priest and martyr.Born at
Heworth Hall , near York, in1635 , he was the son of George Thwing, Esquire, ofKilton Castle , Brotton, and Heworth Hall, and was the nephew of the Catholic martyrEdward Thwing . His mother was Anne, sister of the SirThomas Gascoigne , ofBarnbow Hall ,Barwick in Elmet ,Yorkshire . Thomas Thwing was educated at St Omer and at theEnglish College ,Douai , ordained a priest and sent from there to minister on the English mission in1665 , which he did for some 14 years. Until April1668 , he was chaplain atCarlton Hall ,Carlton-juxta-Snaith , the seat of his cousins the Stapletons. He next opened a school at Quo-usque, the Stapletons' dower-house. When in 1677Mary Ward 's "Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary" began their foundation in the house given by his uncle Thomas Gascoigne at Dolebank, it was in some sense natural that Thwing become their chaplain, three of his sisters being of the community. It was there that he was arrested in the early part of1679 .At the time of the
Titus Oates scare, two servants, who had been discharged from Sir Thomas Gascoigne's service for dishonesty, sought vengeance and reward by revealing a supposed plot by Gascoigne and others to murder the king. It was the sort of thing that happened to many. At first the allegation made no mention of Thwing. Nevertheless, Gascoigne, Thwing, and others were arrested on the night ofJuly 7 1679 , at the Gascoigne's house,Barnbow Hall , and he remained for a year prisoner atYork Castle . He was arraigned at York onMarch 17 withMary Fenwick , Lady Tempest and SirMiles Stapleton , but many jurors were challenged and this led to the trial being postponed to the summer assizes. He was brought to the bar onJuly 29 and Gascoigne's former servant Bolron testified against him. The prosecution played upon a list of Catholics which had been found the night of the arrest, in reality not conspirators but supporters of the new convent. Despite this Thwing was promptly found guilty on the very same evidence upon which his relatives had been acquitted, the sentence being pronounced separately from the felons and murderers found guilty at the same assizes, not out of consideration for his being a priest but because of his social status. Upon hearing it, he humbly bowed his head he said in Latin, "I am innocent." He petitioned for a stay of execution, and the King, Charles II, at first granted this and conferred with the trial judges. However a remonstrance of the House of Commons led to a death-warrant being issued by the King almost immediately, onOctober 13 . OnOctober 23 ,1680 Thomas Thwing was drawn fromYork Castle , past the house where the sisters were dwelling, to the place of execution, where he died aged 46. He was the last of the ""seminary priests"" to be martyred for his faith in England. His remains were handed over to his friends, and buried in the churchyard ofSt Mary Castlegate .Thomas Thwing was beatified by Pope
Pius XI onDecember 15 1929 .ources
Godfrey Anstruther, "The Seminary Priests", Mayhew McCrimmon, Great Wakering, 1976, pp. 225-226.
John William Willis Bund, "A Selection of Cases from the State Trials", University Press, Cambridge, 1882, vol. II, pp. 1055 and 1117ff.
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