Following the outbreak of the
Spanish Civil War in 1936, anti-clerical violence intensified in Republican-controlled areas. Ferragut sheltered her daughters, who were members of religious orders, in her home. On 19 October 1936, militia members raided Ferragut’s home and arrested her along with her four daughters. Ferragut refused to abandon her daughters and they were detained together in the Cistercian convent of Fons Salutis in Algemesí, which had been converted into a prison. During their imprisonment, their captors reportedly attempted to pressure them to renounce their religious vocations, but they refused. On the night of 25 October 1936, they were transported by truck to the nearby town of
Alzira, approximately 8 kilometres away. The vehicle stopped at the entrance to the town, at a site known as
Cruz Cubierta, where a
wayside cross porch marks, according to local tradition, the site where King
James I of Aragon died. According to testimony preserved in the beatification process, she chose to be executed last and encouraged her daughters with the words: She was executed by a firing squad with her four daughters, three of whom were beatified with her: and on 2 July 1939 were transferred to
Algemesí and interred in the crypt of the convent of Fons Salutis. On 16 April 1961, their remains were translated to the parish church of
Saint Pius X in Algemesí. == Beatification ==