Spicer, who came from a prosperous Oxford family, paid 3s. towards the poll tax of 1380. Eight years later felons broke into his draper’s shop, stealing woollen cloth worth 20 marks. In 1389 he witnessed the will of a fellow burgess, Roger Clyfton alias Bedel.
Spicer, having made his will in 1427, died at an unknown date before September 1429, and was succeeded in his property at Oxford by his son, John junior (d.1442), although he had bequeathed some of it to his grand daughter Margaret. The property itself, including ‘Rack Hall’, was mainly concentrated in the suburban parish of St. Michael Southgate and in Grandpont, but the MP’s business had doubtless been done in ‘Drapery Hall’ in the town itself, a building which had come to him by inheritance.
