William’s father, Richard Wygge, a leading clothier of Winchester, occupied a number of local offices from 1357 onwards and was three times mayor (1363-4, 1371-2 and 1380-1) and four times a parliamentary burgess. In 1379 his wife, a woman of independent spirit, publicly declared that she would sell her ale as she liked and had no intention of being brought into court at the summons of mayor or bailiffs.
By the 1380s Wygge had set up in business independently as a draper. His goods and equipment when confiscated in 1381 had been valued at only £4 14s.10d., but he had in stock at the time fabric worth over £81, and as time went on he grew prosperous. As a consequence of his involvement in the processes of Julling, weaving and dyeing, his output evidently became quite considerable: in 1394-5 he sold as many as 116 lengths of cloth. He was also important enough to be among those responsible for the civic ordinance of 1402 which restricted the distribution of fulling and weaving work to the confines of the liberty of Winchester, and later he shared the administration of the fulling mill at Priors Barton.
Wygge’s property interests in Winchester were extensive. His father (who died before 1385) had owned tenements in High Street (including ‘La Cheker’ and ‘La Wolselde’) and a messuage on Silver hill, which had been sold to him complete with dyeing equipment. The latter establishment, settled on William by his parents in 1377, probably served as his home. Two tenements nearby, in Tanner Street, were conveyed to his wife before 1387, and in 1390 they together acquired other holdings.
Wygge died in late November or early December 1413, shortly after the beginning of his fifth mayoralty.
