Thomas Ford (martyr)

For other people named Thomas Ford, see Thomas Ford (disambiguation).

Blessed Thomas Ford (died 28 May 1582), a Devonshire native, was a Catholic martyr executed during the reign of Elizabeth I.

Life

He received a Masters of Arts at Trinity College, Oxford, on 24 July 1567, and became a fellow (although one source says president) there. In 1570, he left for the English College, Douai, and was one of its first three students to be ordained, receiving his orders March 1573 in Brussels.[1]

Soon after receiving his Bachelor of Divinity in Douai, on 2 May 1576, he left for England. There he settled in Berkshire, becoming the chaplain of James Braybrooke at Sutton Courtenay,[2] and then of Francis Yate and the Bridgettine nuns who were staying with Yate at Lyford Grange.[3] On 17 July 1581, he was arrested by the governmental spy, George Eliot, along with St. Edmund Campion.[3] On 22 July of that same year, he was put in the Tower, where he was tortured.

He was brought to court along with Bl. John Shert on 16 November with a faked charge of conspiracy. It is said he had conspired in places he had never been (Rome and Rheims), on days he had been in England. Both he and Shert were condemned on 21 November and, along with Robert Johnson, beheaded in May 1582. All three were beatified in 1889.

Notes

  1.  Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Blessed Thomas Ford". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  2. Ford, David Nash (2010). "The Braybrooke Family of North & West Berkshire". Royal Berkshire History. Nash Ford Publishing. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
  3. 1 2 Ford, David Nash (2011). "The Arrest of St. Edmund Campion". Royal Berkshire History. Nash Ford Publishing. Retrieved 22 January 2011.

References

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