His father, also Patrick Hepburn, had supported the
Scottish Reformation in 1559. In 1567, he helped hold
Dunbar Castle for his kinsman
James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell, and was ordered to surrender Waughton Castle to
Regent Moray. Patrick Hepburn of Waughton and Lufness was retoured heir to his father on 3 April 1605. Hepburn sold the lands of Brethertoun [Brotherton] to
George Keith, 5th Earl Marischal, and his wife Margaret Ogilvie for £20,500
Scots on 8 December 1613. On 10 January 1639, George Lauder of The Bass, and his mother (Hepburn's sister) Isobel Hepburn, Lady Bass, being both Royalists and having spent much time at Court with
Charles I and fearing forfeiture, assigned the barony of
The Bass and a string of other properties to Hepburn. In a Supplication dated 15 September 1641, by Sir Patrick Hepburn of Wauchtoun addressed to the King and the
Estates of Parliament, he mentions that he has lately acquired the right of the lands of Popill and Auld
Haddington from the Laird of The Bass. On 15 November 1641 Hepburn was confirmed in several properties including lands in
Morham and
Garvald previously owned by Lauder. Between 1644 until his death, Hepburn was engaged in a dispute with the Earl of Home over possession of Fast Castle, and the rents of Auldcambus. ==Covenant==