Woodford, whose ancestors had held the Britwell estate since the end of the fifteenth century, went up to Balliol with a leaving exhibition from St. Paul’s at the age of 14.
At the general election to the third Jacobean Parliament Woodford was returned for Bury St. Edmunds on the recommendation of the borough’s main patron Sir Thomas Jermyn*, an associate of Doncaster. Reporting to Nethersole on the subsidy debate, Woodford wrote on 17 Feb. 1621, that ‘I am sure they [the Commons] would not have given so much but in contemplation of the Palatinate; yet that it might not appear that they neglected the king’s own wants they have thought fittest to pass the grant in a free gift to His Majesty’.
Woodford was absent from the autumn sitting, by which time he had return to France. He visited La Rochelle, ostensibly to protest against the impositions laid on English merchants; in fact under this pretext he was charged ‘to dispose the [Huguenots] to put themselves into such a posture of conformity as might give an entrance to an accommodation’ with the king of France.
Woodford’s links with Doncaster, who became earl of Carlisle in 1622, were strengthened by the appointment of his cousin William (1581-1663) as the latter’s chaplain. Both were intimate at Essex House, the London home of Lady Carlisle’s cousin, the 3rd earl of Essex.
