Reynell was born in the last years of the fourteenth century as the eldest son of the head of a family which had been established in Devon for some 200 years. More recently, two marriages to Cambridgeshire heiresses in successive generations had given the Reynells an interest in the east of England. Walter’s synonymous father, who had represented Devon in the Parliament of October 1404, had himself married such an heiress as his third wife. However, even during his lifetime it became apparent to him that the Cambridgeshire interest was more of a liability than an asset to the family, causing him to sell all his property in that county to Sir John Tiptoft† in 1423.
When Reynell finally came into his inheritance it included besides Malston and East Ogwell in Devon various lands in Cornwall, and along with these Cornish holdings he inherited a dispute with Sir John Arundell II* of Trerice, who claimed them in the right of his wife Joan, Walter’s cousin. The process before the justices of assize had been dragging on since 1423, but had not come to trial as it had proved impossible to empanel a complete jury. When the sheriff of Cornwall, Sir William Talbot†, finally produced a jury in 1425, Joan Arundell rejected it on the grounds that Talbot had made the selection on the nomination of Walter Reynell senior. Although the latter seems to have secured his tenement, Arundell did not give up. He counter-sued, and in 1426 it was the younger Walter who after his father’s death had to fight the cadet of the most important gentry family in Cornwall. When the case came to be pleaded, he claimed the property as part of his maternal inheritance. This time there was no difficulty in finding a jury and it upheld Reynell’s claim.
A few years before his father’s death, Reynell had embarked on a military career, by joining the retinue of Sir Hugh Luttrell† of Dunster, the lieutenant of Harfleur, in 1418.
Nevertheless, as a general rule Reynell’s relations with his neighbours appear to have been cordial. He was frequently called upon to attest their property transactions and he regularly served on local juries.
The crisis years of 1450-1 were, it seems, also troublesome for Reynell, albeit for reasons only indirectly connected with the wider unrest that swept England in the aftermath of the loss of Normandy. A major diplomatic crisis had been caused by the seizure in 1449 of the Hanseatic Bay Fleet by the Dartmouth shipman, Robert Wenyngton alias Cane*. In July 1450, commissioners were appointed to arrest Wenyngton, among their number Reynell, and it seems that in execution of this royal commission Walter was openly attacked by a gathering of some of the leading townsmen of Dartmouth, including John Brushford*, Robert Steven*, John Gayncote*. They allegedly forced him under duress to release to Wenyngton all personal actions pending between them, and to free a prisoner, who was at the time in the hands of one John Lake. Wenyngton, the ring leader, aside, at least one other of Reynell’s assailants may have been settling a personal score, for Gayncote was currently engaged in litigation with him in the court of common pleas.
While proceedings against these men were still ongoing, political events in the south-west reached a crisis. In late 1451 open fighting had begun between Thomas Courtenay, earl of Devon, and his old rival William, Lord Bonville*, supported by the earl of Wiltshire. While the immediate troubles were ended by the intervention of the duke of York, the balance of power was tilted towards Bonville and his adherents. The earl was indicted before the Somerset justices on 11 Jan. 1452, and Bonville and Wiltshire were pardoned for their part in the unrest on 19 Feb.
Nor has any evidence been found of his movements in the critical months that followed the dissolution and led up to the battle of St. Albans in May 1455. Yet, when the victors of the battle summoned a fresh Parliament, both he and Ralegh were present in the shire court at Exeter for the county elections, and set their seals to the sheriff’s indenture.
Following these judicial proceedings Reynell disappeared from the political scene for a few years. Instead, he concentrated once more on his private affairs, as well as outstanding business relating to his past offices. Thus, he sued a number of local gentry, including John Radford* and John Byconnell* for debts and obligations.
