ST. Thomas GARNET SJ
ST. Thomas GARNET SJ son of
Richard Garnet Confessor of the Faith, and nephew of Father Henry Garnet SJ
martyr, was born in London in 1574.
For some time he was page to the Count of Arundel, until, in the year 1594, at
the age of sixteen, he entered the college at St. Omer in the Low Countries.
Two years after, he was ordered to the college of St. Alban at VALLADOLID, where
he studied for four years. In the same city he was ordained a priest, and from
there returned to England.
In 1604 he was admitted to the Society of Jesus by his uncle (the local superior
of the Jesuits), but upon attempting to leave England to begin his noviciate at
Louvain, he was stopped and incarcerated in the Gatehouse jail at Westminster,
and later in the Tower of London. He was banished in the year 1606.
Shortly afterwards, he returned surreptitiously to England, where he was
betrayed for being a priest. He was interrogated before the Protestant bishop of
London on the 17th of November 1607, but refused to answer his questions,
neither was he disposed to make the new oath of loyalty, because its contents
were against the Catholic Faith. Having been intensively interrogated already
for the bishop by Sir Thomas Wade, the superintendent of the keep and a very
cruel torturer of priests, Father Garnet was moved to the Old Bailey prison.
Shortly afterwards, he was processed and condemned for his priesthood. While in
jail, some Catholics provided him with means of escaping, but he refused,
choosing rather to obey an interior voice that said to him "noli fugere".
He was stripped, hung, drawn and quartered at Tyburn (London) on the 23rd of
June 1608.
On the 25th of October 1970, he was solemnly canonised by Pope Paul VI.