Soon afterwards the family moved to Saint-Quentin, in northern France, when his father took up an appointment as superintendent of an English factory.
A second attempt in 1847, with an oil painting of The Clemency of Coeur-de-Lion, won him the first prize of £300, and was later purchased by the royal commissioners for £1,000.
[2] In 1850 he exhibited at the Royal Academy for the first time, his subject being The Burial of the Young Princes in the Tower.
This was followed by Edward the Confessor leaving his Crown to Harold in 1851; The Death of Thomas à Becket in 1853; Lucy Preston's Petition in 1856; and The Coronation of William the Conqueror in 1859; but none of Cross's later productions equalled his first effort.
[2] Following his death in London in 1861, his friends bought his Assassination of Thomas à Becket and placed it in Canterbury Cathedral.