He was the elder son of
George Stratton, a
nabob who purchased
Tew Park in Oxfordshire, and his wife Hester Eleanor Light. He matriculated at
St John's College, Cambridge in 1797, graduating B.A. in 1801, and M.A. in 1804. He inherited from his father in 1800, and demolished much of the manor house at Tew Park. He moved into the dower house, to the north, built by the Keck family. Plans were made for a new mansion house, involving
Humphry Repton and
John Adey Repton; but they were not carried out. In early 1803, Stratton became a captain in the Bloxham and Banbury Gentlemen and Yeomanry Cavalry. He tried for a seat in parliament, first at
Eye. He then in 1803 stood at
Coventry, as a supporter of
William Pitt the Younger, at a by-election, spent heavily, but was defeated. He later asked Pitt for a baronetcy. He received an honorary degree from the University of Oxford in 1806, and served as
High Sheriff of Oxfordshire for 1806–7. ==Estate at Great Tew==