The Church, too, must be a family, bishops, priests, deacons, religious and laity, supporting each other and sharing with each other the individual gifts given by God.
Pope John Paul II,
Heaton Park, Manchester, 31st May 1982

Bl. Robert Nutter

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Robert Nutter was born at Burnley in about 1550. He entered Brasenose College, Oxford in 1564 or 1565, and, with his brother John Nutter, also a Catholic martyr, became a student of the English College, Reims. Having been ordained priest, on 21st December, 1581, he returned to England.

On 2 February 1584 he was committed to the Tower of London, where he remained in the pit for forty-seven days, wearing irons for forty-three days, and twice subjected to the tortures of "the scavenger's daughter". On 10 November, 1584, he was again consigned to the pit, where he remained until, on 21 January, 1584-5, he, with twenty other priests and one layman, was shipped aboard the Mary Martin of Colchester, at Tower Wharf.

Landing at Boulogne on 2nd February, he revisited Rome in July, but, on 30th November, was again committed to prison in London, this time to Newgate Prison, under the alias of Rowley. In 1587 he was removed to the Marshalsea Prison, and thence, in 1589 or 1590, was sent to Wisbech Castle, Cambridgeshire. While in prison he joined the Dominican Order.

There, in 1597, he signed a petition to Father Henry Garnet in favour of having a Jesuit superior, but, on 8 November, 1598, he and his fellow martyr, Edward Thwing, with others, besought the Pope to institute an archpriest. He escaped, but was recaptured and hanged at Lancaster on 26th July 1600. He was beatified in 1987.

Source: Wikipedia

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