He was a son of Sir Thomas Radcliffe, and not, as is sometimes stated, a member of the Attleborough branch of the family.
[4] Joan Stanhope, Lady Cromwell died on 10 March 1489–90 and was buried at Holy Trinity, Tattershall, near Ralph Cromwell's home at Tattershall Castle,[5] where there is a commemorative brass image formerly including the Radcliffe coat of arms.
[15] Radcliffe left his own gown of crimson velvet (but not its fur collar) to Hunstanton Church, to make a cope with a cloth of gold orphrey embroidered with his and "Dame Kateryne's" heraldry.
[16] Radcliffe's bequest of vestments at Hunstanton was emulated by John Le Strange (died 1517), a stepson, his wife Katherine's younger son by her first husband.
On October 17, 1591, she was sent to the Tower after Katherine Leigh, one of the maids of honor in her charge, gave birth to a child at court.
[28] In her will, made December 1562 and proven 18 February 1563, Anne left a ring with an emerald to her husband but otherwise stipulated ‘that Sir Thomas Ragland shall not by any ways or means take any benefit or advantage of this will’.
[31] In 1519, when Sir Thomas Le Strange's wife Anne Vaux, the aunt of Katherine Parr, gave birth to her third or fourth child at Hunstanton, her own mother was dead and her mother-in-law had remarried and moved away, leaving it to two of her husband’s aunts, Elizabeth Radcliffe, Lady Woodhouse and Anne Banyard, to attend her for the three weeks leading up to the birth.