Richard Norton ( 1488 â 9 April 1588), known as Old Norton, was an English rebel who participated in the Rising of the North in 1569, alongside several of his numerous sons.
Norton is said to have been born in 1488. He was eldest son of John Norton of Norton Conyers, by his wife Anne, daughter of William or Miles Radclyffe of Rylstone. His grandfather, Sir John Norton of Norton Conyers, was grandson of Sir Richard Norton, chief justice of the common pleas.
Norton took part in the Pilgrimage of Grace in 1536âÂÂ1537, but was pardoned. In 1545 and in 1556 he was one of the council of the north. In 1555 and 1557 he was governor of Norham Castle, but apparently lost these offices on the accession of Elizabeth I.
Norton was however sheriff of Yorkshire in 1568âÂÂ1569. During the York Conference discussing Mary, Queen of Scots, and the Casket Letters, Norton, his son Francis, and Thomas Markenfield plotted to assassinate Regent Moray.
On the breaking out of the Rising of the North in 1569 he joined the insurgents, and is described as "an old gentleman with a reverend grey beard". When the rebels took Hartlepool, they heard that Fadrique ÃÂlvarez de Toledo, 4th Duke of Alba would send supplies to the port. They suspected the message was bogus, perhaps sent by Norton to boost morale. Norton's estates were confiscated, and he was attainted. When all was over, Richard and Francis Norton were not included the pardons granted by Elizabeth I in November 1569.
Norton fled across the border into Scotland. In January 1570 at Cavers Castle he spoke to Robert Constable, an agent belonging to the English royal army, but resisted his suggestions of coming to England and asking for mercy. Francis and Sampson Norton were also staying at Cavers. Constable managed to get Norton to reveal where other fugitives from the rebellion were staying in Scotland. Norton soon went to Flanders, where he and other members of his family were pensioned by Philip II of Spain, his own allowance being eighteen crowns a month. John Story was said to have conversed with him in Flanders in 1571. He afterwards seems to have lived in France, and Edmund Neville was accused of being in his house at Rouen.
He died abroad, probably in Flanders, on 9 April 1588. In Lewes Lewknor's Estate of the English Fugitives (1595), "old Norton" is mentioned as one of those who are "onely for want of things necessarie, and of pure povertie, consumed and dead".
Norton married firstly Susanna, fifth daughter of Richard Neville, 2nd Baron Latimer, and secondly Philippa, daughter of Robert Trappes of London, widow of Sir George Gifford.
He left a very large family, including eleven sons, several of whom were also involved in the rebellion of 1569:
There were two other sons, Richard and Henry, who both died in 1564.
The story of the Nortons is utilised by William Wordsworth in his long narrative poem The White Doe of Rylstone.
As of 1895, a portrait of Norton was in the possession of John Norton, 5th Baron Grantley, the representative of the family at the time.