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Download as PDF; Printable version; ... St Margaret Clitherow's Church is the name of: St Margaret Clitherow's Church, Great Ayton ... 35 The Shambles, location of ...
Margaret Clitherow (née Middleton, c. 1556 – 25 March 1586) was an English recusant, [2] and a saint and martyr of the Roman Catholic Church, [3] known as The Pearl of York. She was pressed to death for refusing to enter a plea to the charge of harbouring Catholic priests.
St Margaret Clitherow's Church is a Catholic church in Great Ayton, a village in North Yorkshire, in England. Until the 1960s, Catholics in Great Ayton worshipped at St Joseph's Church, Stokesley . In 1966, a Sunday mass was instituted in the ambulance station in the village.
On the ground floor is a shrine to St Margaret Clitherow, who was married to a butcher who owned and lived in a shop in the street. Her home is thought to have been No. 10 Shambles, on the opposite side of the street to the shrine. [2] [3] [4]
The church, in 2007. St Margaret Clitherow's Church is a Catholic parish church in Haxby, a town north of York in England.. Catholics in Haxby long worshipped at St Wilfrid's Church, York, then in 1970 mass was first said in Haxby's Memorial Hall.
Among the structures of The Shambles is a shrine to Saint Margaret Clitherow, who was married to a butcher who owned and lived in a shop in the street. Her home is thought to have been number 10 Shambles, on the opposite side of the street to the shrine, at number 35, which has a priest hole fireplace. [12] [13] [14] These are also listed.
Margaret Clitherow (née Middleton, c. 1556 – 25 March 1586) was an English recusant, and a saint and martyr of the Roman Catholic Church, known as The Pearl of York. She was pressed to death for refusing to enter a plea to the charge of harbouring Catholic priests.
The building was the 16th-century home of Margaret Clitherow, who was executed as a recusant in 1586 and canonised in 1970. [1] It was originally one building, it is two storeys with brick walls at the front and rear (the former rebuilt in the early 1800s). The building was divided into two tenements around 1730.