James Butler was the grandson of a London merchant, to whom the forfeited estates commission of Parliament in 1648 sold Amberley Castle, near Arundel, which his father sold in 1683. He himself bought Warminghurst from William Penn in 1702.
I have spared neither breath, cost, nor drink, all of which has fallen singly on me, for my brother Butler, though a good man, is no burgessor.
EHR, xii. 479-80.
During the 1741 campaign the Duke of Richmond reported to Newcastle: ‘Whoring lost Yates his first election, a bad omen for the Butlers’.
