Clifford, John de, ninth Baron Clifford 1435?-1461, son of Thomas, eight baron Clifford [qv.], was born in 1435 or 1436 (Escheat Rolls, iv. 272). He makes his first appearance in February 1458, when, together with Somerset and the Earl of Northumberland, he is found with a grete power lodged without the walls of London aboute Temple barre and Westmynstre, clamouring for compensation for the death of his father at St. Albans. On this occasion the king and his council intervened, and ordered the Duke of York and the Earls of Salisbury and Warwick to establish masses for the souls of the slain nobles and to pay their representatives a notable sum of money (English Chronicle, ed. Davies, 77, 78). Clifford, after the battle of Blore Heath, took the oath of allegiance to Henry VI at the parliament of Coventry, as a Lancastrian, in November 1459 (ib. 84, where he is confused with John Lord Clinton who was attained; see Rotuli Parl. v. 349). About the same time (38 Henry VI) he was made commissary-general of the Scotch marches (Dugdale), and a conservator of the truce with Scotland (Rymer, xi. 434). In July 1460 he was summoned to parliament (Dignity of a Peer, iii. 916). He was one of the Lancastrian leaders at the battle of Wakefield (Eng. Chr. 107) in December 1460, where he is reported to have slain the Earl of Rutland, the young son of the Duke of York, with his own hands (Hall). For his acts of cruelty he is said to have received the by-name of the the Butcher (Dugdale). In the same battle he is charged with having cut off the head of the dead Duke of York and presented it decked with a paper crown to Queen Margaret (Holinshed). Two months later he was present at the second battle of St. Albans (February 1461), but was slain within six weeks at Ferrybridge, on the eve of the battle of Towton (Gregory, Chronicle, 217). The same year he was attainted by act of parliament (Escheat Rolls, iv. 327). His barony of Skipton went to Sir William Stanley, that of Westmoreland to Richard of Gloucester. He left three children, of whom the eldest, Henry (d. 1523) [qv.], is the hero of one of Wordsworth's happiest poems. The romantic story of this noble's early years, and how he was brought up as a shepherd on his father's estates till he was restored to his full honours on the accession of Henry VII, can be traced back at least as far as the middle of the sixteenth century (1548), when it makes its appearance in Hall's Chronicle. Hall, however, and Holinshed following him, give the name of this noble as Thomas, by mistake for Henry. Of Clifford's other children, Richard died abroad, while Elizabeth married Robert, son and heir of Sir John Aske (Dugdale).

Sources:
     Dugdale's Baronage, i. 342-3
     English Chronicles of the reigns of Richard II-Henry VI, ed. Davies (Camden Society), pp. 77, 78, 84, &c.
     Escheat Rolls, iv. 272, 327, &c.
     Gregory's Chronicle of London, ed. Gairdner (Camden Society), pp. 209, 217
     Hall's Chronicle, ed. Ellis (1809), pp. 250-1, 253-5
     Grafton's Chronicle, ed. Ellis, i. 671, 676
     Holinshed's Chronicle, ed. Ellis, iii. 268, 277
     Fabyan's Chronicle, ed. Ellis, p. 639
     Paston Letters, ed. Gairdner, i. 425, ii. 5, 6
     Registrum Abbatiæ Johannis Whethamstede, i. 299, 393
     Report on the Dignity of a Peer, vol. iii. The authority for the details of Lord Clifford's brutal treatment of the Duke of York and the Earl of Rutland is Hall, who, however, it must be remembered, wrote from eighty to ninety years after the battle of Wakefield. From Hall the story passed to Holinshed, and from him to Hume and our later English historians.

Contributor: T. A. A. [Thomas Andrew Archer]

Published: 1887