Sheffield was educated at Christ Church, Oxford from 1574 to 1579.[3]
Career
In 1582, Sheffield was commanded by Queen Elizabeth I to accompany the Duke of Anjou on his return voyage to the European mainland. Sheffield later served as a volunteer in the Netherlands in 1585.[3]
On 13 January 1598, Sheffield was appointed Governor of Brill, Holland.
Sheffield requested appointment to the presidency of the Council of the North under Queen Elizabeth I but was unsuccessful.[4] Under King James I, Sheffield was made Lord Lieutenant of Yorkshire on 1 August 1603 and President of the North on 19 September 1603.[5][6] Sheffield held both posts until 1619 when he resigned to please the Spanish ambassador, having executed a Catholic priest without the leave of King James I.[6]
Sheffield was made 1st Earl of Mulgrave on 5 February 1626 following the coronation of Charles I of England. However, he took the side of the Parliament in the English Civil War as one of the twelve peers who signed the petition of 28 August 1640.[6]
Due to his age, Sheffield was not able to attend the House of Lords consistently, however his proxy vote allowed his grandson Sir Thomas Fairfax to be commissioned Captain-General of the New Model Army in 1645.[8]
Personal life
Sheffield married Ursula Tyrwhitt before 13 November 1581, daughter of Sir Robert Tyrwhite of Kettleby and Elizabeth Oxenbridge. They had six sons and eleven daughters:
Ursula died in 1619. Due to financial difficulties, Sheffield set out to marry a rich wife.[4]
On 4 March 1619, Sheffield married Mariana Irwin (or Irvine), the 16 year old daughter of his dancing master Sir William Irvine (or Urwin), a Scottish courtier who was a Gentleman Usher to Prince Henry and Charles I of England.[9][4] They had three sons and two daughters:
Captain James Sheffield
Colonel Thomas Sheffield
Robert Sheffield
Margaret Sheffield
Sarah Sheffield
Death and legacy
Sheffield died on 6 October 1646 at Butterwick House in Hammersmith.[1] He was buried in St Pauls, Hammersmith in a tomb of black and white marble 7 feet (2.1 m) long, 3 feet (0.91 m) high and 3 feet (0.91 m) over, defended with iron rails, where a monument to his memory was erected by his wife Mariana, Countess of Mulgrave.[5]