William Davison, of Scottish descent (by his…
February 1587 CE
William Davison, of Scottish descent (by his own account), had in 1566 gone to Scotland as secretary to the English ambassador, Henry Killigrew.
Remaining there for about ten years, he was next employed as agent in the Netherlands (1576–79), on missions to Scotland (1583, 1584), and again to the Netherlands in 1585, returning to England in 1586.
This year he had become member of Parliament for Knaresborough, a privy councilor, and on September 30, Walsingham's colleague as principal secretary.
As a privy councilor, he had been a member of the commission appointed to try Mary Queen of Scots, but he had taken no part in its proceedings.
It is Davison who had obtained Elizabeth's signature to the warrant for Mary's execution.
On this occasion and also in subsequent interviews with her secretary, Elizabeth had suggested that she would be glad to avoid the responsibility of the execution, but Mary's jailers, Sir Amias Paulet and Sir Drue Drury, have refused to take the hints thrown out to them.
The privy council, summoned by Lord Burghley, meanwhile decides to carry out the sentence at once.