Early in 1607 two of Backhouse’s relatives, Sir Rowland Lytton* and Sir William Borlase*, were occupied in pacifying the hot-blooded young man who had ‘sent a challenge lately to a gentleman of the Temple, for misusing his mother at a show there two years since’.
Backhouse was living at Kingsley, in Hampshire, in November 1626, a property that had been acquired by his paternal grandfather and which had been conveyed to his late mother-in-law on his marriage in 1615.
On the outbreak of Civil War Backhouse evidently sided with the king, for by October 1643 he was a prisoner in Windsor Castle.
