In the time of Sir Robert Throckmorton, and his son and heir Thomas
(1533-1614), Coughton became a centre for Catholic recusants. The
Tower Room of Coughton Court with its panoramic view for monitoring
any approach to the house made it an ideal location for the secret
celebration of the Mass, and there was also an ingenious double hiding
place built by Nicholas Owen in one of the turrets for the priests in the
event of a raid. The Throckmortons not only provided a relatively safe
place for people to worship; they also assisted in the underground
movements of the priests and established colleges abroad for training
English clergy. They were a crucial part of the network of families that
enabled Catholicism to remain alive throughout the reformation.
Thomas Throckmorton, along with his brothers-in-law Sir William
Catesby and Sir Thomas Tresham, were amongst the leading recusants of
their time. He was frequently fined and spent sixteen years in prison for
his
non-attendance at church. In the Tower Room you can see a painted
tapestry called the Tabula Eliensis, dated 1596, that notes his coat of
arms
and the arms of all the Catholic gentry who were imprisoned for recusancy
during Elizabeth I's reign, grouped by their places of imprisonment.
His grandson Robert was made a baronet by Charles I in 1642 and was
a Royalist, as were succeeding generations. Coughton Court was
occupied by the Parliamentarians during the English Civil War, and was
bombarded by the Royalist armies in order to drive the Parliamentarians
out. As they were being driven out, they set the house on fire. Robert
died
during the war and left a son of nine and Coughton Court under
sequestration. Many years of neglect passed before young Francis could
start to repair the damage. The restoration continued with his son Sir
Robert, 3rd Baronet, who unfortunately met with a setback in 1688 when
a Protestant mob destroyed a 'newly erected Catholic Church', taking the
east wing of the house with it. The ruins remained for 100 years.
Subsequent generations of the Throckmortons maintained their Catholic
faith, with many of the daughters becoming nuns. The family continued to
marry only into other prominent Catholic families, and continued to hear
mass at Coughton Court, although with time their situation became easier
than those of their ancestors. The recusancy laws were repealed in 1792,
and members of the family were accepted into the command ranks of the
armed forces in 1819. The Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829 allowed
them into national office for the first time in almost three hundred years,
which Sir Robert George Throckmorton, 8th Baronet, took quick
advantage of, becoming one of the first Catholic MPs in 1831. He also
built the new Catholic church at the end of the south drive, alongside
the
ruin of the church built by the earlier Sir Robert in the 15th century
and
confiscated from the family during the Reformation.
During the Second World War the family fortunes ebbed, and although the
house was spared being sold, unlike much of the estate, it was occupied
by a Convent School for a while. Lady Lillian Throckmorton, widow of
Courtney Throckmorton and mother of Sir Robert, the 11th Baronet, was
given power of attorney while her son was in the Fleet Air Arm, and she
decided to turn Coughton Court over to the National Trust. Under special
arrangement, the National Trust leased Coughton Court back to Sir
Robert and his heirs for a 300 year term.
Sir Robert died in 1989, passing the lease of Coughton Court to his
cousin, Sir Anthony Throckmorton, the last male heir. Sir Anthony died
in
1994 and the title died with him. However, Sir Robert's niece Clare
bought Sir Anthony's life interest in the lease and she manages the estate
today with her husband and three children.