John Tiptoft, 1st earl of Worcester (born c. 1427, Everton, Bedfordshire, Eng.—died Oct. 18, 1470, London) was a noted English Yorkist leader during the Wars of the Roses, known for his brutality and abuse of the law and called the “butcher of England.”
The son of the 1st Baron Tiptoft, he was educated at Oxford, and in 1449 he was created Earl of Worcester. In 1456–57 he was deputy of Ireland, and in 1457 and again in 1459 he was sent on embassies to the pope. He was abroad three years, during which he made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem; the rest of the time he spent in Italy, at Padua, Ferrara, and Florence, studying law, Latin, and Greek. He returned to England early in the reign of Edward IV and on Feb. 7, 1462, was made constable of England. In 1462 he condemned John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford, and in 1464 Sir Ralph Grey and other Lancastrians. In 1467 he was again appointed deputy of Ireland. During a year’s office there he had the Earl of Desmond attainted and cruelly put to death the earl’s two infant sons. In 1470, as constable, he condemned 20 of the Earl of Warwick’s adherents and had them impaled. On the Lancastrian restoration Worcester fled into hiding but was discovered and tried before John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford, son of the man whom he had condemned in 1462. He was executed on Tower Hill.
On the death of his son, Edward, in 1485 the earldom reverted to the crown.