The Women Who Saved Catholic England  
Risking All to Protect Tudor and Stuart Priests
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399042321
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Much has been written about the historical persecution of Catholics. Priests in particular became prime targets during the heightened tensions of the Armada and the Gunpowder Plot. But those whom they relied on for shelter have received little attention – until now. The underground network of lay supporters, the Catholic Resistance, mostly comprised courageous women of the great (and sometimes not so great) families of England, and their houses riddled with priest holes.

These women fought a cat-and-mouse game with spymasters like Walsingham and Cecil and their spider’s web of clandestine informants, knowing that one slip might lead to arrest, torture and execution.

The indomitable Anne Vaux and her sister Eleanor provide the focus of this story but there were others, including their niece Frances, who as an 11-year-old boldly confronted armed raiders in search of priests; and Margaret Clitherow of York, arrested during a similar search and ultimately pressed to death.

To escape the clutches of Elizabeth’s brutal torturer Richard Topcliffe and others like him, men like Father John Gerard, whose ‘zipwire’ escape from the Tower of London is the stuff of Tom Cruise films, and genius priest-hole creator ‘Little John’, turned to these Sisters of Mercy.
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Much has been written about the historical persecution of Catholics. Priests in particular became prime targets during the heightened tensions of the Armada and the Gunpowder Plot. But those whom they relied on for shelter have received little attention – until now. The underground network of lay supporters, the Catholic Resistance, mostly comprised courageous women of the great (and sometimes not so great) families of England, and their houses riddled with priest holes.

These women fought a cat-and-mouse game with spymasters like Walsingham and Cecil and their spider’s web of clandestine informants, knowing that one slip might lead to arrest, torture and execution.

The indomitable Anne Vaux and her sister Eleanor provide the focus of this story but there were others, including their niece Frances, who as an 11-year-old boldly confronted armed raiders in search of priests; and Margaret Clitherow of York, arrested during a similar search and ultimately pressed to death.

To escape the clutches of Elizabeth’s brutal torturer Richard Topcliffe and others like him, men like Father John Gerard, whose ‘zipwire’ escape from the Tower of London is the stuff of Tom Cruise films, and genius priest-hole creator ‘Little John’, turned to these Sisters of Mercy.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1 The Pearl of York
  • Chapter 2 Mother of all the Good Wives in York
  • Chapter 3 Consider Well What You Do
  • Chapter 4 An Innocent Lamb
  • Chapter 5 Growing Greatly in Debt
  • Chapter 6 Illustrious by Birth
  • Chapter 7 To Die for Christ
  • Chapter 8 Graceful Comeliness
  • Chapter 9 A Man of Cruelty
  • Chapter 10 A Wise Woman
  • Chapter 11 These Wild Heads Had Something in Hand
  • Chapter 12 Why Then, Lady, You Must Die
  • Chapter 13 Where is Mrs Ann?
  • Chapter 14 The Jesuit Has Not Had Fair Play
  • Chapter 15 Never Had a Priest Been Taken Under her Roof
  • Appendix I: Brief Overview of Catholicism in England After the Vaux Sisters
  • Appendix II: The Featured Priests and Associates
  • Appendix III: Locations Mentioned in the Book
  • Bibliography
  • Plates
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