Crofts’ ancestors were living in the parish of West Stow, four miles north-west of Bury St. Edmunds, by 1467, and acquired the manor at the Dissolution of the Monasteries, followed by the purchase of the nearby manor of Little Saxham in 1551.
Crofts’ election for Eye in 1624 is difficult to explain, as he owned no property near the borough. However, his deceased brother-in-law, Sir John Crompton, had been returned there in 1620. His only committee, on 4 May, was for a bill to naturalize three Scotsmen.
On the eve of the Civil War Crofts lost his wife, described in her funeral monument as ‘a woman of extraordinary perfection’, after 32 years of marriage. ‘This is the faithful and loving testimony of her husband’, proclaims her epitaph, ‘who intends no other monument for himself, but desires only to live in her memory, which was so much the worthier person’.
