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Author Topic: A Catholic Martyr?  (Read 1408 times)

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Offline poche

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A Catholic Martyr?
« on: November 01, 2015, 05:12:49 AM »
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  • The last person hanged for witchcraft in Boston could be considered a Catholic martyr.

    In the 1650s, Ann Glover and her family, along with some 50,000 other native Irish people, were enslaved by Englishman Oliver Cromwell during the occupation of Ireland and shipped to the island of Barbados, where they were sold as indentured servants.

    What is known of her history is sporadic at best, though she was definitely Irish and definitely Catholic. According to an article in the Boston Globe, even Ann's real name remains a mystery, as indentured servants were often forced to take the names of their masters.

    While in Barbados, Ann's husband was reportedly killed for refusing to renounce his Catholic faith. By 1680, Ann and her daughter had moved to Boston where Ann worked as a “goodwife” (a housekeeper and nanny) for the John Goodwin family.

    Father Robert O'Grady, director of the Boston Catholic Directory for the Archdiocese of Boston, said that after working for the Goodwins for a few years, Ann Glover became sick, and the illness spread to four of the five Goodwin children.

    “She was, unsurprisingly, not well-educated, and in working with the family, apparently she got sick at some point and the kids for whom she was primarily responsible caught whatever it was,” Fr. O'Grady told CNA.

    A doctor allegedly concluded that “nothing but a hellish Witchcraft could be the origin of these maladies,” and one of the daughters confirmed the claim, saying she fell ill after an argument with Ann.  

    The infamous Reverend Cotton Mather, a Harvard graduate and one of the main perpetrators of witch trial hysteria at the time, insisted Ann Glover was a witch and brought her to what would be the last witch trial in Boston in 1688.

    In the courtroom, Ann refused to speak English and instead answered questions in her native Irish Gaelic. In order to prove she was not a witch, Mather asked Ann to recite the Our Father, which she did, in a mix of Irish Gaelic and Latin because of her lack of education.

    “Cotton Mather would have recognized some of it, because of course that would have been part of your studies in those days, you studied classical languages when you were preparing to be a minister, especially Latin and Greek,” Father O'Grady said.

    “But because it was kind of mixed in with Irish Gaelic, it was then considered proof that she was possessed because she was mangling the Latin.”

    Allegedly, Boston merchant Robert Calef, who knew Ann when she was alive, said she “was a despised, crazy, poor old woman, an Irish Catholic who was tried for afflicting the Goodwin children. Her behavior at her trial was like that of one distracted. They did her cruel. The proof against her was wholly deficient. The jury brought her guilty. She was hung. She died a Catholic."

    Mather convicted Ann of being an “idolatrous Roman Catholick” and a witch, and she hung on Boston Common on November 16, 1688. Today, just a 15 minute walk away, the parish of Our Lady of Victories holds a plaque commemorating her martyrdom, which reads:

    November 1688, Goodwife Ann Glover an elderly Irish widow, was hanged as a witch because she had refused to renounce her Catholic faith. Having been deported from her native Ireland to the Barbados with her husband, who died there because of his own loyalty to the Catholic faith, she came to Boston where she was living for at least six years before she was unjustly condemned to death. This memorial is erected to commemorate “Goody” Glover as the first Catholic martyr in Massachusetts.”

    The plaque was placed at the Church on the tercentennial anniversary of her death in 1988 by the Order of Alhambra, a Catholic fraternity whose mission includes commemorating Catholic historical persons, places and events. The Boston City Council also declared November 16 as “Goody Glover Day”, in order to condemn the injustice brought against her.  

    Ann Glover has not yet been officially declared a martyr by a pope, nor has her cause for canonization been opened to date, partly because her story has faded into obscurity over time, Fr. O’Grady said.

    “Part of the dilemma here (too) is that when she was hanged, Catholics were a tiny, minuscule, minority in Boston, so picking up her ‘cause’ was not easy or ‘on top of the list,’” he said.

    Ann Glover's trial also set the tone for the infamous Salem Witch Trials in 1692, during which 19 men and women were hanged for witchcraft, and in which Reverend Cotton Mather and his anti-Catholic prejudices played a major role.

    http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/was-the-last-witch-of-boston-actually-a-catholic-martyr-27747/


    Offline RomanCatholic1953

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    A Catholic Martyr?
    « Reply #1 on: November 01, 2015, 07:38:26 PM »
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  • Good Post, Poche


    Offline Patrick JK Gray

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    A Catholic Martyr?
    « Reply #2 on: November 02, 2015, 06:34:10 AM »
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  • God rest her. That there were and are witches is unquestionable. This lady was no witch, but rather a martyr at the hands of an evil heresy. She is in the bliss of the Beatific Vision now.

    Let no-one pretend that foul Protestantism is 'Christianity'. Christianity is Catholicism and nothing else. The Protestants, though they retain more of the truth than either, are as much our enemies as the Jєωs and the Masons [and invariably dance to their tune].
    Let nothing fret you
    Nothing upset you
    Everything falters
    God never alters
    Patience withal
    Will obtain all.
    Who to God will cling
    Can lack for no thing.
    God alone suffices!


    Sacred Heart of Jesus, I put in you all the trust I can lay my h

    Offline Patrick JK Gray

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    A Catholic Martyr?
    « Reply #3 on: November 02, 2015, 06:54:24 AM »
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  • I ought not have said 'they retain more of the truth'. That reeks of the heresy of 'separated brethren' or 'imperfect communion'. They are heretics, rebels and mortal enemies of the Church, having nothing of the truth whatever.

    With regard to the Jєωs and Masons, this article from the Catholic Gazette of 1936 (via Mr H. Makow -- who is he?) is very interesting:

    Quote
    "We are the Fathers of all Revolutions - even of those which sometimes happen to turn against us.  We are the supreme Masters of Peace and War.  We can boast of being the Creators of the REFORMATION!  Calvin was one of our Children; he was of Jєωιѕн descent, and was entrusted by Jєωιѕн authority and encouraged with Jєωιѕн finance to draft his scheme in the Reformation.

    "Martin Luther yielded to the influence of his Jєωιѕн friends, and again, by Jєωιѕн authority and with Jєωιѕн finance, his plot against the Catholic Church met with success...

    "Thanks to our propaganda, to our theories of Liberalism and to our misrepresentations of Freedom, the minds of many among the Gentiles were ready to welcome the Reformation.  They separated from the Church to fall into our snare.  And thus the Catholic Church has been very sensibly weakened, and her authority over the Kings of the Gentiles has been reduced almost to naught..
    .
    "We are grateful to Protestants for their loyalty to our wishes - although most of them are, in the sincerity of their faith, unaware of their loyalty to us. We are grateful to them for the wonderful help they are giving us in our fight against the stronghold of Christian Civilization, and in our preparations for the advent of our supremacy over the whole world and over the Kingdoms of the Gentiles. - See more at: http://henrymakow.com/Jєωιѕн_peril.html#sthash.FG7MVyCk.dpuf
    Let nothing fret you
    Nothing upset you
    Everything falters
    God never alters
    Patience withal
    Will obtain all.
    Who to God will cling
    Can lack for no thing.
    God alone suffices!


    Sacred Heart of Jesus, I put in you all the trust I can lay my h

    Offline Patrick JK Gray

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    A Catholic Martyr?
    « Reply #4 on: November 02, 2015, 12:15:28 PM »
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  • I am most sorry to bother you. Dr Makow does not appear to be a Catholic; rather an enemy of the Church (he accuses St Ignatius of having been a Satanist). His website is thoroughly disreputable and dangerous (the above, obscene posts, blasphemous comments), quotes the abominable writer Nesta Webster (confounded the Jesuits with the Freemasons and Rosicrucians (!!!), obviously perilous to read and allegedly a polytheist interested in Hinduism and believing in the equality of all religions) and I bitterly regret referring to it. No Catholic should risk their faith on such a perilous website and I beg you to avoid it.

    There is many a sound writer (Fr Fahey, Mgr Dillon, Bishop Williamson) on the cօռspιʀαcιҽs of Satan and many a creature of the Devil peddling more or less subtle lies to lead us astray.

     In such a complex field, a Protestant writer, or one without the Faith (Makow, Webster) can readily delude a Catholic by, say, seeming to denounce the Jєωs and the Masons but peddling lies. If we follow them we will be lost. Only Catholic writers can be trusted, at least by laymen.

    The source in itself is excellent, an article from the Catholic Gazette, a publication of the Catholic Missionary Society, Brondesbury founded in 1902 (as the Diocesan Missionaries of Our Lady of Compassion).

    I attempted to obtain the source, which is anonymous. I have read that ''it consist[s – I have changed the tense] of extracts from speeches made as a convention in Paris of B’nai B’rith, the exclusively Jєωιѕн branch of Fɾҽҽmαsσɳɾყ.'' This reference comes from Fr Feeney's magazine Point {not linked to for fear of heresy}. He was a heretic but may have been telling the truth.

    https://archive.org/stream/TheJєωιѕнPerilAndTheCatholicChurch/tmi2_Jєωιѕн_peril#page/n0/mode/2up

    The credentials of the paper:
    http://archive.thetablet.co.uk/article/9th-february-1918/11/the-catholic-gazette

    It can be read in full here and I shall move it to the Library.

    Had I taken half an hour to read the website a little more and to think about what I was saying, three needless posts could have been condensed into one  (to the effect that Protestantism is wicked and a creature of Satan and of the Jєωs).

    Please forgive me for derailing the topic.
    Let nothing fret you
    Nothing upset you
    Everything falters
    God never alters
    Patience withal
    Will obtain all.
    Who to God will cling
    Can lack for no thing.
    God alone suffices!


    Sacred Heart of Jesus, I put in you all the trust I can lay my h


    Offline poche

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    A Catholic Martyr?
    « Reply #5 on: November 14, 2015, 12:12:14 AM »
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  • I friend of mine who as active in his mosque went to some of the local Protestant churches in the area to promote good will after 911. Later on this is what eh had to say of his experience, "These guys really hate you."