Roger Wilbraham was born in Nantwich, Cheshire in 1553, the second of four sons of Richard Wilbraham and his first wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Maisterson. The Wilbraham family was a junior branch of the Wilbrahams of Woodhey, who were prominent in Cheshire affairs from the 13th century onwards; Roger's daughter Elizabeth married into the senior branch of the family. His father served as Master of the Jewel House to Mary I and also collected revenues for the queen in the Nantwich Hundred. In 1580 he built Townsend House on Welsh Row in Nantwich, where James I stayed during his visit to the town in 1617. His mother's family, the Maistersons, was one of the most important in Nantwich.
Solicitor-General for Ireland
Wilbraham was educated at Shrewsbury School and Cambridge University. He became a barrister, and was admitted to Gray's Inn in London in 1576. On 13 February 1585, he was appointed Solicitor-General for Ireland, a position he held for 14 years, although he frankly admitted that he saw it as the pathway to a more senior position at the English Court. During his years in Ireland, the Irish judiciary were notorious for corruption, and for bitter feuds among themselves; shortly before his arrival in Ireland Nicholas Nugent, the Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas, had been hanged for treason on very thin evidence, after a trial presided over by hostile colleagues. Wilbraham's attitude to judicial misconduct was cynical and pragmatic: even where a judge's conduct was disgraceful, if he gave good service to the Crown then, unless he was convicted of treason or another capital crime, he should not be treated severely, Wilbraham argued. Wilbraham himself undoubtedly gave good service to the Crown: in 1597 the Privy Council of Ireland, in a letter to Sir Robert Cecil lamenting the inefficiency of the Irish law officers , exempted Wilbraham from their criticisms, as "he hath taken more care and pains than all the rest". He did much to increase the Crown revenues, and although he made a substantial profit in the process, this was not then regarded as corruption. In 1597 a complaint was made that he was keeping all the fees for making grants on the Exchequer of Ireland for himself, rather than sharing them with the other law officers and the Remembrancer. The Dublin government appears to have ignored the complaint, no doubt because of its opinion, expressed forcefully to Cecil the same year, that Wilbraham was the only one of the law officers who did his job efficiently. In 1590-3, when the Attorney-General for Ireland, Sir Charles Calthorpe, was suspended from duty, Wilbraham seems to have coped efficiently with a double workload.
Later career
On 1 May 1600, he became the Master of Requests, a post he retained under James I, and he also served as the king's surveyor of the Court of Wards and Liveries. In his journal he commented acerbically on the added burden of work which followed James' accession, due to the flood of requests for favours. He was elected a member of parliament for Callington in 1604 and returned as knight of the shire for Cheshire in 1614. He enjoyed the patronage of Robert Cecil, who was well aware of his record of Crown service in Ireland, and that he was a reliable supporter of the Crown's policy. In the debate on the Union, he was one of the few English MPs who strongly supported the proposed Union between England and Scotland. He was prepared to give Cecil his support for his cherished project, the Great Contract, but without much enthusiasm: in his journal he notes how little support there was for the Great Contract in the House of Commons, and it eventually lapsed. He received a knighthood before 1613. He kept a journal from 1593 to the end of his life: this shows him to have been a shrewd observer of the political scene, rather than a major political figure in his own right. He was also active in Nantwich's salt-making industry.
Family life
He married Mary Baber, daughter of Edward Baber MP, of Chew Magna, Somerset, Recorder of Bath, and his wife Katherine Leigh, daughter of Sir Thomas Leigh, Lord Mayor of London, in January 1599/1600. The couple had three girls, Marie, Elizabeth and Catherine. After his death his widow remarried Sir Thomas Delves, 1st Baronet, and died in 1644. Roger purchased the Dorfold estate in the parish of Acton near Nantwich in 1602. Shortly afterwards, he gave the estate to his youngest brother, Ralph, who built the present Dorfold Hall on the site of the earlier hall in 1616–21. He died on 31 July 1616 at Monken Hadley, Middlesex, of "an Ague", an acute fever, most likely malaria. He is buried at Monken Hadley. A wall monument by Nicholas Stone commemorating Wilbraham and his family was erected in the Church of St Mary the Virgin, Monken Hadley in 1616, at a cost of £80. It has busts of Wilbraham and his wife, as well as figures of their daughters. His three daughters inherited an income supposed to amount to £4000 annually. Marie married Thomas Pelham, Elizabeth married her distant cousin Sir Thomas Wilbraham, 2nd Baronet, and Catherine married Sir Henry Delves, 2nd Baronet, the eldest son of her stepfather Sir Thomas by his first wife.
Charitable works
In 1613, Sir Roger founded Wilbraham's Almshouses for six poor men at what was then the end of Welsh Row in Nantwich; they were the town's earliest almshouses. He also founded almshouses for two poor men in Acton in the same year. Additionally, he gave £4 to be distributed among the poor of Nantwich on Good Friday every year. He was also active in Monken Hadley, founding almshouses for "six decayed housekeepers" in 1616.