The Battle of Hopton Heath, in Staffordshire, was a battle of the First English Civil War, fought on Sunday 19 March1643 between Parliamentarian forces led by Sir John Gell and Sir William Brereton and a Royalist force under Spencer Compton, 2nd Earl of Northampton. Gell had successfully taken Lichfield and was on his way with about 1,500 men and some artillery pieces to join Brereton in a projected attack on Stafford. They met at Hopton Heath and were attacked there by the Royalists, whose force consisted of about 1,100 cavalry, 100 foot and artillery, including a large piece called "Roaring Meg". After an artillery barrage the Royalist cavalry charged the entrenched parliamentarians, putting Gell's dragoons and his and Brereton's horse to flight. A second charge was repelled by Gell's musketeers and Northampton was unhorsed. He refused to surrender and was killed. During the night the Parliamentarian troops withdrew, leaving a large part of Gell's artillery in the enemy's hands. Brereton withdrew to Nantwich while Gell marched through Uttoxeter to Derby, taking Northampton's body with him. He attempted to ransom the Earl's body for the return of the captured artillery pieces, without success.
The Battle of HoptonHeath, in Staffordshire, was a battle of the First English Civil War, fought on Sunday 19 March1643 between Parliamentarian forces led by Sir John Gell, 1st Baronet and Sir William Brereton and a Royalist force under Spencer Compton, 2nd Earl of Northampton.
Gell had successfully taken Lichfield and was on his way with about 1,500 men and some artillery pieces to join Brereton in a projected attack on Stafford.
They met at HoptonHeath and were attacked there by the Royalists, whose force consisted of about 1,100 cavalry, 100 foot and artillery, including a large piece called "Roaring Meg".
HoptonHeath is some three miles north of Stafford on the south bank of the River Trent, on terrain of open rough pasture between the villages of Salt to the north and Hopton to the south.
To the east of the Heath was a walled deer park and on the western side lay arable farmland with ditches and hedgerows separating the Heath from the cultivated hay fields.
At the narrowest point of the Heath ran a ridge between the enclosures to the east and west, forming a bottleneck of strategic advantage.