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Ralph Sherwin, BLESSED, English martyr, b. 1550 at Rodesley, near Longford, Derbyshire; d. at Tyburn, December 1, 1581. In 1568 Sir William Petre nominated him to one of the eight fellowships which he had founded at Exeter College, Oxford, probably acting under the influence of the martyr’s uncle, John Woodward, who from 1556 to 1566 had been rector of Ingatestone, Essex, where Sir William lived. There Blessed Ralph took the degree of DMA. July 2, 1574, and was accounted “an acute philosopher, and an excellent Grecian and Hebrician”. In 1575 he fled abroad and went to the English College at Douai, where March 23, 1577, he was ordained priest by the Bishop of Cambrai. On August 2, 1577, he left for Rome, where he stayed at the English College nearly three years, becoming leader of the movement which placed it under the super-vision of the Jesuits. On April 18, 1580, he set out for England, a member of a party of fourteen; at Milan they were the guests of St. Charles for eight days, and Blessed Ralph preached before him. On November 9. 1580, he was imprisoned in the Marshal sea, where he converted many fellow-prisoners, and on December 4 was transferred to the Tower, where he was severely racked, December 15, and afterwards laid out in the snow. The next day he was racked again, after which second torture he “lay for five days and nights without any food or speaking to anybody. All which time he lay, as he thought in a sleep, before our Savior on the Cross. After which time he came to himself, not finding any distemper in his joints by the extremity of the torture”. After over a year’s imprisonment he was brought to trial, on an absurd charge of treasonable conspiracy, in Westminster Hall November 20, 1581, and being found guilty was taken back to the Tower, whence he was drawn to Tyburn on a hurdle shared by Blessed Alexander Briant. He suffered very bravely, his last words being, Jesu, Jesu, Jesu, esto mihi Jesus!
JOHN B. WAINEWRIGHT