The Gunpowder Plot: Overview
by David Nash Ford
"Remember,
remember the fifth of November.
Gunpowder,
Treason and Plot.
I see no reason
why Gunpowder Treason
Should ever be
forgot."
This poetic little
rhyme, still popular among children today,
continues to remind us why, on the night of
November 5th, bonfires surmounted by cloth
manikins or "Guys" are set alight in
every town and village in Britain amongst a blaze
of celebratory fireworks:
The scene was the early 17th century Lambeth
home of one John
Wright deep in the suburbs of the
City of London. Three British Catholic gentlemen
met in secret to discuss their troubles. King
James VI of Scotland had only recently taken on
the English throne as James
I but, despite promises of a
relaxation in the anti-catholic laws, it now
appeared that the new King would be even more
severe in their persecution than his predecessor
had been.
Being no stranger to plots and intrigue, Robert
Catesby, a notorious
Northamptonshire catholic, now felt the time was
right to strike a blow for his religion. He had
called his cousin, Thomas
Wintour, to the house of his friend,
Wright, in order to lay before the them both his
plan to blow up the King and the House of
Lords at the next Opening of Parliament. With the
monarch, the Prince of Wales and most of his
leading ministers dead, they would seize the
young Prince Charles
and the Princess Elizabeth and raise a general
revolt to return Catholicism to the land.
In May 1604, Thomas Wintour enlisted the help
of a Yorkshire mercenary named Guy Fawkes who had
distinguished himself on the continent in the
Spanish Army. With his vast experience of
dangerous situations, Fawkes was to be the man of
action in a group which was growing quickly as
Catesby persuaded relatives, friends and
colleagues to enter the conspiracy and help
finance his plans. Robert
Wintour, Christopher
Wright, Thomas
Percy, John
Grant, Ambrose
Rokewood, Robert
Keyes, Sir
Everard Digby, Francis
Tresham and Catesby's servant, Thomas
Bates all joined in the hazardous
plot.
Originally the Catesby rented a house near to
the Palace of Westminster and the group began to
dig a tunnel out under the Houses of Parliament.
However progress was slow for these gentlemen who
were not used to such hard labour. Eventually, in
March 1605, Thomas Percy was able to use his
connections at the Royal Court to rent a cellar
right under the House of Lords! The tunnel was
quickly abandoned and, posing as Percy's servant,
one "John Johnson," Fawkes was able to
fill the underground storehouse with some
thirty-six barrels of gunpowder hidden beneath
coal and wooden sticks, a store of fuel for the
winter. Everything was set in place: all the
conspirators had to do now was wait.
Perhaps they had prepared too early though,
for doubts began to creep into the minds of some
of the plotters, worried about fellow catholics
who would be present in Parliament on the
appointed day, the 5th November. Only ten days
before the Opening of Parliament, Lord
Monteagle, an apparently reformed
catholic, was sitting down to dinner in his
Hoxton home when an important letter arrived for
him. It read:
"My lord, out of the love I bear to
some of your friends, I have a care for your
preservation. Therefore I would advise you, as
you tender your life, to devise some excuse to
shift of your attendance of this Parliament, for
God and man hath concurred to punish the
wickedness of this time. And think not slightly
of this advertisement but retire yourself into
your country, where you may expect the event in
safety, for though there be no appearance of any
stir, yet I say they shall receive a terrible
blow, the Parliament, and yet they shall not see
who hurts them.. This counsel is not to be
contemned, because it may do you good and can do
you know harm, for the danger is past as soon as
you have burnt the latter: and I hope God will
give you the grace to make gooduse of it, to
whose holy protection I commend you."
The
authorship of the letter has never been certainly
identified, but Lord Monteagle was Francis
Tresham's brother-in-law.
Monteagle immediately showed the letter to Robert
Cecil, the Earl of Salisbury and
Secretary of State. Though rather slow to act,
the Privy Council eventually had the vaults
beneath the Lords searched on the 4th November,
first by the Earl of Suffolk and late the same
evening by Sir Thomas Knyvett. Composed to the
end, Fawkes coolly let the officials into Percy's
cellar. Of course, the gunpowder was quickly
discovered and Guy Fawkes was overpowered.
On hearing that their plans had been foiled,
Robert Catesby and Thomas Wintour fled to the
Midlands where they met up with the rest of their
party in Warwickshire, but failed to rally any
support. They managed to travel amongst the
houses of friends and sympathisers for three days
before finally being captured in a bloody raid on
Holbeche House in Staffordshire. Catesby, Percy
and the two Wright brothers were killed, while a
wounded Thomas Wintour and Ambrose Rokewood were
taken away to London. Others were captured a few
days later (though Robert Wintour was at large
for some two months). All the conspirators, save
for Tresham were executed for their crimes.
Francis Tresham died while still a prisoner in
the Tower of London and it has often been
suggested that his death was arranged to cover up
his complicity in the uncovering of the plot.
Whether through genuine second thoughts or
external pressures, Tresham may have warned his
brother-in-law, Lord Monteagle, of the plot some
time before the arrival of the now-famous letter
and together they agreed upon this means of
scuppering the plan, yet still giving the
conspirators enough time to escape. There is
certainly much more to the famous "Gunpowder
Plot" than first meets the eye and its
mysteries endure to this day.
How were these known trouble-makers able to so
easily penetrate the inner sanctum of English
Government? And why did it take so long for the
cellars to be searched? Is it possible that the
Earl of Salisbury had actually instigated the
plot in order to frighten the King into
recognising the Catholic threat? A popular theory
sees Guy Fawkes as an agent provocateur
with other plotters, like Tresham, acting as
double agents. It seems more likely, however,
that Salisbury's agents merely infiltrated an
existing conspiracy. He then left the plot's
unveiling until the last minute for added
dramatic effect. In fact, the King may never have
been in any real danger.
More Detail on the
Gunpowder Plot
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