He was styled by the
courtesy title Earl of Stafford (his father's secondary peerage) until the attainder of his father in 1521. In 1547 he petitioned Parliament for restoration in blood, but did not claim any of his father's forfeited land or titles. In 1548 he was summoned to Parliament by writ, by
King Edward VI, and was thus created 1st
Baron Stafford. The barony was initially regarded as a new creation, but in February 1558, he won the right to have it recognised as carrying precedence of the first creation of 1299, created for his ancestor
Edmund de Stafford, 1st Baron Stafford (1272/3-1308), of
Stafford Castle in Staffordshire,
feudal baron of Stafford. In 1554, having petitioned Queen
Mary I for financial assistance, he was made one of two
Chamberlains of the Exchequer, a position that brought him an annual fee of £50. This was the 4th creation of the title
Baron Stafford which eventually was surrendered in 1639 by his descendant Roger Stafford, 6th Baron Stafford (called in his youth by the surname "Floyde" ''"This unfortunate man, the great-grandson of the last Duke, was then sixty-five, and had sunk into so abject a condition that he felt ashamed of bearing his own name, and long passed as Fludd, or Floyde, having, it is supposed, assumed the patronymic of one of his uncle's servants, who had reared and sheltered him in early life."'' Having trained as a lawyer at
Gray's Inn in 1528, in 1531 he was appointed to the honourable post of
recorder of the
borough of
Stafford, next to his family's ancient seat of
Stafford Castle. He was later appointed a
justice of the Peace for both Staffordshire and Shropshire in 1536. Between 1558 and 1559 he was the
lord-lieutenant of Staffordshire, a role which included being appointed as clerk of the Peace. He is sometimes identified as the Henry Stafford who sat for
Stafford in the House of Commons in 1545 and 1547, but it is more likely that this was his illegitimate half-brother
Henry Stafford. ==Literary interests==