In 1553, the first year of the Catholic
Queen Mary I of England, Sir Edward buried his father, Sir John "Quondam" Sutton, with Catholic rites. In 1554 Queen Mary granted him the manors of Horborne, the Priory of Dudley, and titles of Northfield and Sedgley, with lands and rights in Dudley, Tressel and Cradley. Sir Edward was married three times and had three children: 1. Catherine Brydges (m. 1556, d.1566), a Gentlewoman of the
Privy Chamber to Queen Mary, and the daughter of
John Brydges, 1st Baron Chandos and Elizabeth (née Grey) of Wilton; they had one child: • Anne (b. c. 1556, d. 1605), who married first
Francis Throckmorton, conspirator against
Queen Elizabeth I of England and had issue, and second Thomas Wylmer Esq., barrister at law and had issue. Queen Mary settled upon Edward and Catherine and their heirs the "... lordships of Sedgley, Himley and Swinford, the hays, forests and chases of Ashwood and Chaspell, and the lands called Willingsworth, in Sedgley, with divers lands and tenements in Himley, Wombourne and Swindon." With another grant in 1554, The year after Edward's death, Mary remarried to
Richard Mompesson (d. 1627), courtier and briefly Member of Parliament. She died in 1600 and is buried in
St Margaret's Church, Westminster. In 1567, Sir Edward negotiated a prenuptial article of agreement for his daughter Anne, with
Sir John Throckmorton for her to marry his eldest son and future conspirator,
Francis Throckmorton. As part of this agreement, Anne was sent to be brought up by her future mother-in-law, Margery Throckmorton and the manors of Sedgley, Swinford and Himley and all other lands granted to Edward Sutton, Lord of Dudley by
Philip and
Mary were part of the dowry. Anne's maternal aunt, Mary Brydges, was married to George Throckmorton, John's brother and Francis' uncle. Anne and Francis had a son, John. After Francis was executed for treason in 1584, Anne married the Oxford educated barrister and member of
Lincoln's Inn Thomas Wylmer Esq. Sir Edward's will was dated 8 July 1586 and mentions his ironworks and a large debt load, so large that he allowed his executors 21 years in which to discharge them using profits from his stock and iron manufacturers. He was buried at
St. Margaret's Church, Westminster on 12 August 1586 and was succeeded by his son,
Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley (1567–1643). ==Notes==