Andrew Bromwich

Andrew Bromwich ( c.1640-1702 ) was an English Roman Catholic priest, a survivor of the Popish Plot, and the founder of the Oscott Mission, which later developed into St. Mary's College, Oscott.

Early career

He was born at Old Oscott in Staffordshire, to a Roman Catholic farming family which, according to local tradition, had already produced several priests. He entered the English College, Lisbon in 1668, was ordained about 1672, and returned to Staffordshire to take up his mission.[1] His home county had one of the strongest Catholic communities in England, and it had for many years enjoyed a certain degree of immunity from the Penal Laws due to the fact that Walter Aston, 2nd Lord Aston of Forfar, a wealthy local landowner, was a Catholic who made little attempt to conceal his beliefs, and raised his children in the same faith.[2]

Bromwich took the crucial precaution, which ultimately saved his life, of swearing the Oath of Supremacy and the Oath of Allegiance. Prior to the outbreak of the Popish Plot it was tacitly understood that priests who could prove that they had taken the oaths were to be left in peace, and even at the height of the hysteria caused by Plot judges were often disposed to be merciful to them.[3]

Popish Plot

During the Popish Plot, Walter Aston, 3rd Lord Aston of Forfar, who had just succeeded to his father's title and estates in Staffordshire, as well as his unofficial role of protector of the local Catholic community became a principal target of the informers when he dismissed his steward, Stephen Dugdale, for gambling. Dudgale in revenge turned informer. His intelligence, charm and social standing were a marked contrast to the notably unsavoury earlier informers like Titus Oates and William Bedloe, and as a result even King Charles II, who had previously been a complete sceptic on the subject, "began to think there was somewhat in the Plot".[4] After some hesitation Dugdale directly accused Lord Aston of treason, and as a result Aston went to the Tower of London, though he was never brought to trial and was released on bail a year later, and did return to prison. The removal of their powerful patron exposed the Staffordshire Catholics to the full rigors of the Popish Plot: Kenyon notes that once the initial hysteria abated, Staffordshire was one of the few parts of England outside London where the Plot really took hold.[5]

Trial

Bromwich was tried at the Stafford Assizes in August 1679 with the Jesuit William Atkins (1601-1681) who was so old and frail that even the most credulous adherents of the Plot must have had some difficulty in believing him to be a conspirator.[6] In fact unlike earlier victims of the Plot, Bromwich and Atkins were charged only with acting as Catholic priests in England, but even so they were liable to the death penalty under the statute of 1585 "against Jesuits and Seminarians". [7]They were tried before the Lord Chief Justice, Sir William Scroggs who was a convinced believer in the Plot, and though tolerant enough of the Catholic laity, violently prejudiced against the priesthood. In the event he was prepared to be merciful to these particular priests, but not until the guilty verdict was in, and both the jury and the accused were subjected to his notorious bullying manner. Bromwich's plea that he had taken the oaths was dismissed as a lie: "you priests are full of tricks", most unjustly, since Scroggs himself later admitted that the plea was true. The jury were treated to a tirade by Scroggs on the evils of the priesthood : "It is to these sorts of men we owe all the troubles we are in, the threat to the King's life, the subversion of our government, and the loss of our religion."[8] Not surprisingly both Bromwich and Atkins were found guilty.

Lord Chief Justice Scroggs

Having secured the required verdicts, Scroggs was now disposed to be merciful. Bromwich produced proof that he had taken the oaths, which unofficially entitled him to a reprieve, while Scroggs accepted that Atkins' age and frailty made him a suitable case for clemency. Atkins died in prison in 1681; Bromwich must have been released at the latest in February 1685 when James II announced that all persecution of his Catholic subjects should immediately cease.[9]

Later career

Under the Catholic King James Bromwich had nothing to fear from openly practicing his faith, and he resumed his ministry in Stafford. It was in these years that he founded a small mission at Oscott for the shelter, and later training, of priests. Surprisingly he was able to continue work after the downfall of King James at the Glorious Revolution: possibly he was protected by the strength of local feeling in favor of the Catholic faith. At his death he bequeathed his old family home to the mission. The mission survived and grew in the eighteenth century, and was the origin of St Mary's College, Oscott.[10]

St Mary's College, Oscott

Death

Bromwich died in 1702. He was buried in the family vault at Handsworth.[11]

References

  1. Croft, Walter, Gillow Joseph,and Kirk, John Historical Account of Lisbon College St. Andrews Press Barnet 1902 p.49
  2. Kenyon, J.P. The Popish Plot 2nd Edition Phoenix Press London 2000 p.7
  3. Kenyon p.203
  4. Kenyon p.134
  5. Kenyon pp.162-4
  6. Kenyon p.204
  7. 27 Elizabeth I c.2
  8. Kenyon p.204
  9. Kenyon p.272
  10. Croft, Gillow and Kirk, p.49
  11. Croft, Gillow and Kirk, p.49
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