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Everard Digby
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==Hunting party== [[File:Guy Fawkes House -Dunchurch-20May2005.jpg|right|thumb|Guy Fawkes House, formerly known as the Red Lion, where Digby was installed on 4 November 1605]] On 2 November at Gayhurst, while making preparations for his hunting party, Digby was visited by Gerard. Having noticed that the house was almost completely empty, the Jesuit asked him if there was "any matter in hand" and if Garnet knew of it. Keen not to implicate Gerard, despite being told less than two weeks earlier that the plot had Jesuit approval, Digby told him that there was nothing he knew of "or could tell him of". Although Gerard later used this conversation to defend himself against those who accused him of involvement in the plot, he lived to regret not being given the opportunity to dissuade Digby from his course.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|p=196}}</ref> Two days later Digby and his servants were ensconced at the Red Lion inn, in [[Dunchurch]], where his hunt was to take place. He took with him several items of clothing, including "a white satin doublet cut with purple". Also present, but uninvolved, were his uncle, Sir Robert Digby, [[Humphrey Littleton]] and his nephew [[Stephen Littleton]]. They ate supper, before being joined by fellow conspirator [[John Grant (Gunpowder Plot)|John Grant]] and a friend. Also invited was the stepbrother of plotters [[Robert and Thomas Wintour]], John Wintour. They attended a mass the next morning, conducted by a Father Hammond, before the party moved on.<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=198β199}}</ref> Around midnight on 4 November, [[Guy Fawkes]] was discovered guarding the gunpowder the plotters had placed beneath the House of Lords, and arrested. Those conspirators still in London soon took flight for the Midlands, finding along the way those who had already left to prepare for the planned uprising. They met Digby and his party at Dunchurch.<ref>{{cite web |title=Parishes: Dunchurch and Thurlaston Pages 78-86 A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 6, Knightlow Hundred. |url=https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/warks/vol6/pp78-86 |website=British History Online |publisher=Victoria County History, 1951 |access-date=10 May 2023}}</ref> Catesby told Digby that the king and [[Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury|Salisbury]] were dead, and "if true Catholics would now stir, he doubted not that they might procure to themselves good conditions". Digby was won over, but many of his party were less than impressed at being so badly deceived, and worse, being associated with treason. One of his servants asked Digby what would happen to them; Digby told him that although he was aware of their ignorance, "but now there is no remedy".<ref>{{Harvnb|Fraser|2005|pp=205β206}}</ref>
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