Upon the accession of Queen
Mary I, William Parr was arrested and was committed to the
Tower after his traitorous complicity with
John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland's failed plot against Mary to place
Lady Jane Grey upon the throne. After William Parr was sentenced to death on 18 August 1553, Anne went to court and intervened on his behalf with Queen Mary I in hopes that they [she] would be able to keep their estates. Parr was released. The bill which had declared their marriage null and void was reversed on 24 March 1554. That December, Anne used the reversal to her advantage and was granted an annuity of £100. Again in December 1556, Anne was granted another annuity of £450. She remained at the royal court until the ascension of
Elizabeth I. Elizabeth held William Parr in high favour and Anne most likely knew that her adulterous history would not endear her to the Queen. William Parr was restored to blood and was re-created Marquess of Northampton, re-elected to the
Order of the Garter, and was made a privy councillor among other things. She had several more children by John Lyngfield but they, like her first child, were legally declared bastards. Only one daughter, Mary, is documented as having lived to adulthood. She married a Thomas York by whom she had children, but they all lived in obscurity. Author Charlotte Merton suggested that Katherine Nott, who held an unspecified position in Queen Elizabeth I's household from 1577 to 1578, was also a daughter of Anne. Sir Robert Rochester and Sir Edward Waldegrave held Benington Park, in
Hertfordshire, as
feoffees for her use; however, upon the death of Rochester in 1557, Waldegrave transferred the property to Sir John Butler. In response, Anne brought a lawsuit against Waldegrave and Butler which was heard in the
Court of Chancery. She won the case but Butler petitioned to retry the case and continued to regard the park as his own. Butler's petition was apparently unsuccessful because following Queen Elizabeth I's accession to the throne in November 1558, Anne had retired to Benington Park where she quietly spent the rest of her life.
Death Anne Bourchier died on 28 January 1571 at
Benington. Parr died the same year and was buried in the
Collegiate Church of St. Mary in
Warwick. His funeral and burial was paid by the Queen. He had married two times after Anne, but only his third wife,
Helena Snakenborg, whom he had married after Anne's death in May was considered legal. He fathered no children by any of his wives and the little money and estates he had left were passed to his cousins. Upon Anne's death, the barony of Bourchier passed to her cousin,
Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex. == Ancestry ==