Tuesday, March 31
2008: The Ordination of Bishop Campbell
1601: Blessed Thurstan Hunt and Robbert Middleton
Sunday, March 29
The Liturgy at Dalton Square
Friday, March 27
1830: The ordination of Richard Brown
Wednesday, March 25
Dolphinlee

Tuesday, March 24
The Whiteside Chalice
Sunday, March 22
1925: the first Lourdes Pilgrimage
Thursday, March 19
Father Joseph Preston

Wednesday, March 18
Blessed John Thewlis and Roger Wrennall
Blessed John Thewlis
"Thewlis was born at Upholland about 1568, and after being trained abroad, was sent to England in 1592. Being arrested soon afterwards, he was imprisoned at Wisbech, and on his escape, or release, ministered in Lancashire till his arrest. At his trial William Leigh, the famous Puritan rector of Standish, was brought in to dispute with him, but to no avail. A godson, Mr. Assheton of Lever, offered him £20 a year if he would renounce his religion, but in vain. So he was for his priesthood condemned as a traitor... He was executed accordingly; his head was set up on the castle walls, and his quarters at Lancaster, Preston, Wigan and Warrington."
Blessed Roger Wrennall
"Before his trial, Thewlis had made his escape from the castle by the aid of another Catholic prisoner, the above named Roger Wrennall, a weaver from the Kirkham district. After wandering about all night, they found themselves in the morning close to Lancaster, and so were recaptured. Wrennall was condemned for assisting the priest, being hanged as a felon. At first the rope broke and he fell to the ground, whereupon the ministers present urged him again to take the oath and save his life. He answered 'I am the same man I was, and in the same mind; use your pleasure with me'; running up the ladder, as having had a vision of 'the good things of the Lord.' A new rope was found, and he was executed."
Blessed Roger Wrennall
"Before his trial, Thewlis had made his escape from the castle by the aid of another Catholic prisoner, the above named Roger Wrennall, a weaver from the Kirkham district. After wandering about all night, they found themselves in the morning close to Lancaster, and so were recaptured. Wrennall was condemned for assisting the priest, being hanged as a felon. At first the rope broke and he fell to the ground, whereupon the ministers present urged him again to take the oath and save his life. He answered 'I am the same man I was, and in the same mind; use your pleasure with me'; running up the ladder, as having had a vision of 'the good things of the Lord.' A new rope was found, and he was executed."
Sunday, March 15
Elizabeth Dalton: the last of a devoted race
Saturday, March 14
Inside Dalton Square II
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Friday, March 13
Inside Dalton Square I
Tuesday, March 10
1537: The Execution of John Paslew

This is an image of the 1536 'Pilgrimage of Grace', a popular uprising that protested against the dissolution of the monasteries, the break with Rome and other aspects of the way England was being run. After the uprising ended, King Henry VIII had over 200 people put to death in an attempt to prevent any further trouble. Amongst those executed was John Paslew, Abbot of Whalley, who died in Lancaster on this day in 1537. Canon Billington writes about the event in his history of the parish: "The townsmen in 1536 clearly sympathised with the Pilgrimage of Grace, and a significant warning was given them early in the following year, when John Paslew, the venerable Abbot of Whalley, and a Sawley monk were executed at Lancaster for participation in that movement. William Trafford, Abbot of Sawley, soon afterwards suffered at the same place for the same cause. Two of the Furness monks were imprisoned in the castle." The Abbots are not counted among the Lancaster Martyrs, though they are mentioned at the foot of the Martyrs' Plaque on the Cathedral sanctuary.
Sunday, March 8
1961: The Dialogue Mass

Saturday, March 7
From Chapel to Cinema

Thursday, March 5
The other garden ornament
Wednesday, March 4
The Old School Cross
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