Sir Richard Warburton (died 1610) was an English politician who sat in the
House of Commons between 1601 and 1610.
Warburton was the third son of Peter Warburton of Hefferston Grange in Weaversham, Cheshire and his wife Alice Cooper, daughter of John Cooper of Abbots Bromley, Staffordshire. He was educated at
Clement's Inn and then at
Lincoln's Inn in 1583. He was a gentleman pensioner from around 1592 until his death. In 1600 he was
Constable of Lancaster Castle and steward of Lonsdale hundred. In 1601, he was elected
Member of Parliament for
Bridport. He was knighted in 1603. In 1604 he was elected MP for
Penryn and sat until his death in 1610.[1]
^The History of Parliament entry confuses Sir Richard Warburton’s wife, Anne Vavasour, with Oxford’s mistress, Anne Vavasour. The distinction between the two Anne Vavasours is clarified by Steven May[2] in the ODNB entry for Oxford’s mistress: [Oxford’s mistress] is often confused with her niece, also Anne Vavasour, who served as a gentlewoman of the privy chamber, c.1601–3. In 1603 she married Sir Richard Warburton of London (d. 1610), the third son of Peter Warburton of Hefferston Grange, Weaversham, Cheshire, with Alice, daughter of John Cooper. Their son Cecil was Warburton's heir. This Anne was related to Anne Clifford and in the service of Lucy, countess of Bedford, before coming to court. She attended Elizabeth's funeral and received a pension of £66 13s. 4d. early in James's reign. They had a son.[3]