William Clopton


William Clopton was a member of the English gentry who inherited New Place in Stratford upon Avon, and in 1563 sold it to William Bott.

Biography

William Clopton, born in 1538, was the second but only surviving son of William Clopton, and Elizabeth Grey, the daughter of Sir Edward Grey of Enville, Staffordshire, and Joyce Horde.
, which William Clopton sold in 1563 to William Bott
From the thirteenth century, the Clopton family seat was Clopton House near Stratford upon Avon. William Clopton's father is said to have been the 'champion of the Catholic party' in the area, against William Lucy of Charlecote. He served the table of Queen Mary I with wafers at the feast which followed her coronation on 1 October 1553, receiving as his fee 'all the instruments as well of silver or other metal for making of the same wafers, and also all the napkins and other profits thereunto appertaining'.
William Clopton's parents died within a year of each other. His mother, Elizabeth Grey, was buried in Holy Trinity Church in Stratford on 31 January 1559, probably in what has been termed the Clopton chapel at the east end of the north aisle of the church. On 4 January 1560, his father made his last will, witnessed by his agent William Bott, requesting burial in the same place. After his father's death, Clopton resided at Clopton House, while his father's agent, William Bott, moved from his home in Snitterfield into New Place in Stratford upon Avon.
William Clopton, aged twenty-two at his father's death in 1560, was his father's only surviving son and heir, but in order to pay the legacies bequeathed to his four sisters, Anne, Elizabeth, Eleanor and Rose, and to finance his travels in Italy, he was forced to sell a portion of his inheritance. In 1563 he sold New Place to William Bott, who had already been residing there for some time. However in the following year he brought a case in the Court of Star Chamber against Bott, accusing him of fraud and forgery. Bott sold New Place in 1567 to William Underhill, an Inner Temple lawyer and substantial property holder in Warwickshire.
He is said to have built 'the oldest surviving portions of Clopton House'. He and his wife were Catholic recusants; however after his death it was reported that his widow 'goeth now to church'.
He died in 1592. His widow, Anne, survived him by two years; both were buried in Holy Trinity Church. As he had no surviving male issue, he had settled his property on his two surviving daughters, Joyce and Anne.

Family

He married Anne, the daughter of Sir George Griffith, with whom he had two sons and four daughters: