This Member’s father, who claimed descent from the Lancashire Assheton family seated at Great Lever, was gentleman of the horse to the ‘good earl of Bedford’ (Francis Russell†). Nothing is known of Ashton’s own career before the accession of James I, but in 1604 he became responsible as clerk of the market for the unpopular practice of purveyance. By 1611 he was in the service of lord treasurer Salisbury, paying doctors’ bills ‘by my lord’s commandment’, and he received some modest grants of recusants’ land, perhaps only as a trustee.
On Salisbury’s recommendation Ashton was returned for Hertford when the borough was enfranchised in 1624, though only after a hotly contested election.
Ashton continued to prosper after his parliamentary career was over, purchasing Feckenham Forest in Worcestershire from the Crown, and a small estate in Hertfordshire.
