Sir William and his sons Henry and Ralph were active during the war of the
Rough Wooing and were stationed at
Berwick upon Tweed. William Eure sent
Lord Hertford news of rumours he had heard from Scotsmen that the
Matthew Stewart, 4th Earl of Lennox,
Regent Arran and
Mary of Guise had held a meeting at
Stirling Castle and would reconcile their differences. If their factions were united the Scots would be able to resist English ambitions to force the marriage of
Mary, Queen of Scots and
Prince Edward.
The burning of Edinburgh Hertford organised a major
assault by sea on Edinburgh for May 1544. William and Ralph Eure were to bring a diversionary force of March men to
Haddington. Ralph asked Hertford for a reinforcement of 1000 Yorkshire archers so that they could press forward from Haddington to be in sight of the landing place at
Granton. In the event, it was agreed that Hertford would summon Eure when he had disembarked his troops in Edinburgh. (When Eure's men arrived in Edinburgh they would get their pay). Hertford landed on Sunday 4 May 1544 and sent for Eure. His letter reached Berwick on Monday at 2pm, and Eure's reply was received at
Leith on Tuesday at 5pm. 4000 border horsemen arrived in Edinburgh on Wednesday 7 May. While the army was camped near
Seton Palace,
Lord Maxwell requested to speak to Ralph Eure but Hertford would not allow it. Instead, Maxwell was brought back to England.
Assurances On 7 June 1544, a number of Scottish borderers gave their oath to be "full part takers" with England, known "
Assured Scots". Ralph Eure, as Warden of the Middle March, was given three "pledges" or hostages for the fulfilment of the oath by 24 members of the Oliver family and their kinsmen. These were Dandy Oliver, Rinyan (Ninian) Oliver and Patty Oliver who were kept at
Warkworth Castle. On the same day Ralph took four Nixon hostages for the loyalty of 35 Nixons, and four Crosiers for 50 of their family, and 3 hostages for the Hall family. In October 1544, Ralph Eure gained the allegiance of Andrew Kerr of Ferniehurst and 40 followers of various names and the town of Jedburgh. Eure took 21 hostages, including a man for each family name. If the Scots failed to fulfil their contract of assurance the hostages could be executed.
Jedburgh On 9 June 1544, Sir William and his colleagues met at
Milfield near
Wooler and decided to march on
Jedburgh. The final plan had been proposed by Lord Hertford on 27 May 1544 and endorsed by the English Privy Council and
Henry VIII, after Hertford had discussed the pros and cons of a more modest attack in March with Ralph Eure. An assault on Jedburgh had also been proposed as part of the major raid in May. Two days before the meeting at Milfield, Ralph Eure had written to Lord Hertford from
Warkworth Castle, explaining that his father was ill ("somewhat crossed") and reassuring Hertford that he could lead his father's East March men. Ralph asked Hertford to send his trumpeter for the Jedburgh raid. However, William seems to have led the raid. At Jedburgh, where he had heard there were seven cannons at the marketplace, he divided his force into three. The Scottish defenders fled without engaging. Sir William burnt the
Abbey, the Greyfriars and various
bastle and fortified houses in the town. They captured 500 horses and seven cannons. On their way back to England, they burnt the
Tower of Cailing Craig,
Cessford Castle,
Morebattle church, Otterburn, Cowboge and other places. Near to the English border, at
Kirk Yetholm, they observed fires raised by a Scottish raiding party. Ralph Eure with Richard Bowes, Captain of
Norham, and 500 men rode forward and captured or killed a number of Scots.
Coldingham Later in the month, Henry Eure and
George Bowes captured
Coldingham, where the Priory was defended by cannon, after a 5-hour battle. Subsequently, William Eure wrote to the
Earl of Shrewsbury that he had escorted the Italian military surveyor Archan (
Archangelo Arcano) to
Coldingham. The new Captain of Coldingham, George Bowes, said he could hold the place for 40 hours against the Scottish army if they brought two cannons. Ralph had reported to William that
Regent Arran with other Scottish lords were gathering an invasion force at
Dunbar. Ralph also sent this news to Shrewsbury. The Lords of the Privy Council had already found Ralph's intelligence gathering useful, and in January they had authorised Shrewsbury to cover the sums that Ralph laid out for "compassing sundry exploits and intelligence." Arran's host did move towards Coldingham, but Arran halted this advance before Sir William's force could engage him. Henry Eure, in July 1544, joined George Bowes and raided
Edrom,
Preston,
Patrick Hume's Tower and
Duns. On 3 July, William Eure organised the burning of the Castle of
Greenlaw. Ralph burnt the
Barmkin of Ormiston and the church tower at
Eckford.
Muirhouse and Ancrum Moor The Eure family continued these raids into November and again in 1545. As a Scottish army mustered on the eastern border near
Lauder, Ralph argued for an attack on
Hawick. A raid to
Melrose or Jedburgh led to Ralph Eure's death at the battle of Ancrum Moor in February 1545, his companions Basford and a Scotsman John Rutherford of
Edgerston cut down beside him. Regent Arran was shown Ralph's body by a man called Vicar Ogle, and said;God have mercy on him, for he was a fell cruel man and over cruel, which many a man and fatherless bairn might rue; and, wellaway that ever such slaughter and bloodshedding should be amongst Christian men. The defeat at Ancrum was blamed on Ralph's over-reliance on his wavering Scottish allies and his foolhardy courage.
Robert Bowes was made Warden of the Middle March in his place. To avenge Ralph, Henry Eure and George Bowes went to
Bowmont in Teviotdale and demolished two towers and burnt farmsteads belonging to the Laird of
Molle (Mow). In March 1548 Henry Eure reported his father's death to
Lord Grey of Wilton. Henry's next duty was to make inquiries about a captured Lieutenant of Spanish mercenaries and an Italian who had escaped and fled to Scotland. ==Governance of Berwick==