Widcombe first occurs as witness to a Bath deed in 1388. By 1403 he was prominent enough to act as executor of Sibyl Pochon, who gave him her property in Walcot Street and the residue of her goods, all to be disposed of at his discretion; and five years later he took on a similar, though more complicated task, in executing the wills of Thomas Rymour, who committed suicide, and the latter’s sister-in-law. He was a member of the jury summoned in 1411 to decide on a site in the city for the new pillory. In 1417 he acquired a tenement in Broad Street.
biography text
Volume
Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
49653
