23 January 2014, The Tablet

Campaign launched to buy recusant mansion


A fund-raising campaign has been launched to purchase one of England’s grandest recusant homes to put it back into church hands, writes Liz Dodd.

Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor and former MP Ann Widdecombe have pledged their support for a bid to buy Sawston Hall, near Cambridge, which has been put on the market for £4.75 million.

The Grade-I listed Tudor mansion has three priest holes, some of which were built by St Nicholas Owen, who died under torture in 1606 having helped conceal priests during the reign of Elizabeth I. He was canonised as one of the 40 martyrs of England and Wales. Another of that group, St John Rigby, is also closely associated with Sawston.

The sixteenth-century house has five bedrooms, four reception rooms and a chapel and is set in 57 acres of land.

It was the family seat of the Huddleston family for 500 years – in 1553, John Huddleston had sheltered the future Mary I – but left the family’s hands in the 1980s.

It is owned currently by Stephen Coates, a former hedge-fund manager, who lives there with his family. The campaign group Save Sawston Hall, which wants to buy the house, says it would transform it into a Catholic heritage centre and open it up for retreats and to the general public. It has contacted prominent Catholics including the former Prime Minister Tony Blair and has invited the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge to visit the house for tea.


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