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You know of my passion in particular for married saints. James Duckett was born at Gilfortrigs, Westmorland in England. He lived at a time when Elizabeth I was Queen of England. As a young man he became an apprentice printer in London. He studied the book carefully and believed that the Catholic Church was the true Church. In those days, Catholics were ill-treated in England.
James decided that he wanted to be a Catholic anyway and would bravely face any trouble that came his way. The minister from his previous church came to look for him because James had been a regular church goer, attendance was mandatory by law. James refused to go back, saying he would not return until better arguments for the Anglican faith were made to him. He was sent to prison twice for his stubbornness and both times the owner of the printing press he worked for helped free him.
But then the man asked James to find himself another job. James Duckett knew there was no turning back and was able to find a disguised Catholic priest in the Gatehouse prison. He married a Catholic widow and their son became a Carthusian monk. Blessed James Duckett never forgot that it was a book that had changed his life. He made it his duty to provide his neighbors with Catholic books as he knew these books would help encourage and teach them about the faith and the Catholic Church.
So dangerous was this work that he was in prison for nine years out of the twelve that he was married. Blessed James admitted the truth of this in court in a very self-possessed manner and with a calm demeanor. It was unheard of to condemn a man on testimony of only one witness, so the jury found Blessed James not guilty, initially; but the judge, Sir John Popham, the Lord Chief Justice, browbeat the jury, which reversed its verdict and Blessed James was found guilty of felony.
Peter Bullock turned traitor because he himself was sent to prison for a true crime and hoped to be set free, but he was not freed and was condemned alongside Blessed James. Both Blessed James and his betrayer were sent to die on the same day, carted to the gallows at Tyburn.