Sir Arthur Bassett was a member of the prominent west-country Basset family and was MP for Barnstaple in 1563 and Devon in 1572. He served as JP for Devon from 1569 to his death and as Sheriff of Devon in 1574–5. He was knighted in 1575. He had been appointed deputy warden of Stannaries by 1580.
Sir Robert Basset, his eldest son and heir, MP for Plymouth in 1593, who married Elizabeth Periam the second daughter and co-heiress of Sir William Peryam, Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer. Due to his Plantagenet ancestry he made what turned out to be a foolish and costly decision to offer himself as one of the many claimants to the throne of England after the death of Queen Elizabeth, perhaps encouraged by his father-in-law Peryam. He suffered a heavy fine for his action which, according to the biographer John Prince, involved the sale of thirty of the family's manors.
Margaret Bassett, who married Richard Duke of Otterton, Devon.
Death and burial
Bassett died of Gaol Fever in 1586 whilst serving in his judicial role at the notorious LentBlack Assize of Exeter from 14 March 1586. Eight other judges or Justices of the Peace also died of the same fever. In his will dated 18 October 1585 he asked to be buried "honestly and decently" beside his wife. He died before 7 April 1586. His curiously small chest tomb with inscribed slate top slab exists in Atherington Church, which was historically within the manor of Umberleigh. It is likely that his burial took place in the Umberleigh Chapel, now a ruin, which stood next to the manor house of Umberleigh. All the tombs and monuments were removed from there to Atherington Church in about 1820, and thus Sir Arthur's slab probably sits on a modern base. The surface of the slate has largely flaked off, but the central escutcheon showing the arms of Bassett impaling Chichester is still visible, with part of the inscription in a ledger line around the perimeter, and some verse beneath the shield: "Here lie ye bodies of ye Right Worshipful and Worthy Knight, Sir Arthur Bassett and Elianora his wife, daughter of Sir John Chichester of Rawleigh... the 2nd April 1586. The latter buried the 10th July 1585... behind them 5 sonnes and 2 daughters. Requiescant in pace" " Below is the impaled shield, below which is the following verse:
"He that is three in one and one in three, First made us two, then one, this one were wee, One love, one life we lived, one year, one death Rocked us asleepe by borrowing but our breath. Grave the bed that holds us both, the stone hides us covert, the bed is one, One Heaven contains our souls, one trumpte one day, raise our bodies from this bed of clay. Death which useth others to dissever, once united us forever"