Richard Herst

Summary

Richard Herst (Hurst) (died 29 August 1628) was an English Roman Catholic recusant layman. He is a Catholic martyr, beatified in 1929.

Blessed

Richard Herst
Martyr
BornBroughton, near Preston, Lancashire, England
Died29 August 1628
Lancaster, England
Beatified15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI
Feast29 August
Attributesholding an ear of wheat, or a lamb

Life edit

Herst is thought to have been born at Broughton, near Preston, Lancashire, England, where he was a well-to-do yeoman, farming his own land. He was arrested while out ploughing his fields.[1] As he was a recusant, Norcross, a pursuivant, was sent by the Bishop of Chester to arrest him. The pursuivants had a fracas with Hurst's servants, in the course of which one of the pursuivant's men, by name Dewhurst, in running over a ploughed field, fell and broke his leg. The wound mortified and proved fatal, and before his death Dewhurst made a solemn oath that his injury was the result of an accident. Nevertheless Hurst was indicted for murder, as the government wished at that time to make severe examples of recusants.[2]

Through Hurst's friends a petition was sent to King Charles I of England, also supported by Queen Henrietta Maria. No evidence contradicting Dewhurst's dying declaration having been adduced, the jury were unwilling to convict; but the foreman of the jury was told by the judge, in the house of the latter, that the government was determined to get a conviction, that a murder had been committed, and that the jury must bring in a verdict of guilty. Hurst was convicted and sentenced to death; on the next day, being commanded to hear a sermon at the Anglican church, he refused and was dragged by the legs for some distance to the church, where he put his fingers in his ears so as not to hear the sermon.[2]

At the gallows he was informed that his life would be spared if he would swear allegiance to the king, but as the oath contained passages to which he objected, he refused and was at once executed. He was executed at Lancaster.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ "The Lancaster Martyrs", Lancaster Castle
  2. ^ a b c Brown, C.F. Wemyss. "Richard Hurst." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 15 Jan. 2014
Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Richard Hurst". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. The entry cites:
    • Joseph Gillow, Bibl. Dict. Eng. Cath., s.v.;
    • ____, Lancashire Recusants, in manuscript;
    • Richard Challoner, Memoirs, II (Edinburgh, 1878) 97-101;
    • A True and Exact Relation of the Death of Two Catholiks at Lancaster, 1628 (London, 1737), a rare tract;
    • Henry Foley in Stonyhurst Magazine No. XX, 112;
    • Charles Dodd-Tierney, Cath. Hist.