- Andrew Broughton
Andrew Broughton (1602/3–1687) was Clark of the Court at the High Court of Justice for the trial King
Charles I of England .There are not may records of his early life. He was probably born in Seaton, Rutland as the younger son of Richard Broughton (d. 1635). By 1627 Broughton was living in Maidstone, Kent and in 1639 he was appointed clerk of the peace for the county of Kent by the the Earl of Pembroke who was at that time
Lord Chamberlain . He lost this position under the machinations surrounding the start of theEnglish Civil War , specifically his involvement in the impeachment of Earl of Strafford and the imprisonment of Geoffrey Palmer for protesting against theGrand Remonstrance .Sean Kelsey, ‘Broughton, Andrew (1602/3–1687)’,Oxford Dictionary of National Biography , Oxford University Press, Sept 2004. cites
*G. J. Armytage, ed., The visitation of the county of Rutland in the year 1618–19, Harleian Society, 3 (1870), 28–9
*will, TNA: PRO, PROB 11/168, fols. 39v–40r [Richard Broughton]
*will, TNA: PRO, PROB 11/239, fols. 32r–33r [John Broughton]
*J. Cave-Browne, ed., The marriage registers of the parish church of All Saints, Maidstone (1901), 50
*W. Newton, The history and antiquities of Maidstone (1741), 135–6
*J. M. Russell, The history of Maidstone (1881), 192–5, 354
*K. S. Martin, ed., Records of Maidstone (1926), 98, 102, 113, 116, 119, 120
*E. Stephens, The clerks of the counties, 1360–1960 (1961), 109
*J. G. Muddiman, The trial of King Charles the First (1928)
*CSP dom., 1649–50, 315; 1653–4, 45, 47–8, 53, 94, 122, 145, 161, 199, 225; 1672, 78, 199
*State trials, 4.1292
*F. A. Inderwick and R. A. Roberts, eds., A calendar of the Inner Temple records, 2 (1898), cix, 292, 299, 306
*A. Woolrych, Commonwealth to protectorate (1982), 160, 221–3, 412–13
*Diary of Thomas Burton, ed. J. T. Rutt, 4 vols. (1828), vol. 4, pp. 144, 292, 325–6, 330 and n.
*The memoirs of Edmund Ludlow, ed. C. H. Firth, 2 vols. (1894), vol. 1, pp. 214, 215, 218; vol. 2, pp. 276, 343, 344, 347, 357, 513
*J. H. Dixon, ‘The regicides’, N&Q, 5th ser., 6 (1876), 13]"Broughton was a member of the Kent county committee from 1643. He acted as attorney on behalf of the corporation of Maidstone during the First English Civil War. In November 1648 he was elected Mayor of the town. Two months later he was he was appointed Clark of the Court at the High Court of Justice for the trial King
Charles I of England . As Clark of the Court it was Broughton who read out the charge against the king and required him to plead, and at the end of the trial declared the court's sentence of death.During the
English Interregnum he served as a member of theBarebones Parliament , on the Council of State between14 July 1653 and November 1653, and in theThird Protectorate Parliament in which "Towards Richard himself he was positively insulting" (Woolrych, 222).At the Restoration Broughton, was exempted from the general pardon under the
Indemnity and Oblivion Act , [John Raithby (editor 1819). Statutes of the Realm: volume 5: 1628-80 (1819), pp. 226-234. "Charles II, 1660: An Act of Free and Generall Pardon Indempnity and Oblivion.", [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=47259#s34 XXXIV. Persons excepted by Name who were concerned in the Murder of King Charles I.] ,British History Online ] and was likely to lose his life — The other clark at the trial,John Phelps was also exempted but only for "penalties not extending to Life" — so Broughton and Phelps fled, reports in 1662 placed them in Hamburg, but later that year Broughton arrived in Lausanne in Switzerland where several other regicides were residing. In 1664 he travelled to Bern withEdmund Ludlow andNicholas Love , to thank the senate of Bern for their offer of sanctuary. Broughton remained exile for 25 years dying peacefully inVevey , where he was buried in the church of St Martin.References
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