Sir Edward Fitton the younger (1548?–1606), was an Englishman who helped in the Elizabethan plantation of Ireland.
Contents |
Fitton was the son and heir of Sir Edward Fitton (the elder) of Gawsworth, Cheshire.[1] His education included attending Brasenose College, Oxford, from which he graduate in 1566 with a BA, and then on to Grays Inn (1568).[1]
Fitton, was receiver general for Ireland in 1579. His father died in July that year and being disappointed in his expectation of succeeding his father as vice-treasurer of Ireland, he retired to England shortly after having been knighted by Sir William Pelham in 1580.[2][3]
Sir Edward was returned as a Member of Parliament (MP) for Wigan, Lancashire in 1572, as MP for Boroughbridge, Yorkshire in 1588.[1]
Sir Edward's interest in Ireland revived when it was proposed to colonise Munster with Englishmen, and he was one of the first to solicit a slice of the forfeited estates of the Gerald FitzGerald, Earl of Desmond. On 3 September 1587 Sir Edward passed his patent for 11,515 acres in the counties of Limerick, Tipperary, and Waterford; but the speculation proved to be not so profitable as he had anticipated, and on 19 December 1588 he wrote to William Cecil that he was £1,500 out of pocket through it, and begged that his rent might be remitted on account of his father's twenty years' service and his own.[4] He was most energetic in his proposals for the extirpation of the Irish, but failed to fulfil the conditions of the grant, and was noted as an absentee.[5]
Sir Edward was also an active in administration of districts close to his family seat of Gawsworth in Cheshire. From around 1583 he was a Justice of the Peace (JP) in Cheshire and Lancashire, Sheriff of Lancashire in 1591/92, and in 1601 mayor of Macclesfield.[6] He died in London in March 1606 and was buried shortly after on 3 April at Gawsworth.[1]
Sir Edward married Alice, daughter and sole heiress of Sir John Holcroft of Holcroft, Lancashire, who survived him until 5 February 1626, and who, after his death in 1606, erected a monument to his memory in Gawsworth Church.[7]
He was the father of Sir Edward Fitton (3 Dec 1572 - 10 May 1619), another son, Alexander, and daughters, Anne and Mary, who has been speculated as the "Dark Lady" of Shakespeare's sonnets.