Reynold was one of the wealthier men to represent Leicester in Henry VI’s reign, for he was assessed on an income of as much as £20 p.a. in the Leicestershire tax returns of 1436.
From the mid 1430s Reynold is usually described in the borough records as ‘the elder’ or ‘senior’ to distinguish him from his son. The younger John was also active in Leicester’s affairs: in the early 1440s he was deputy to Richard Hotoft*, the royal bailiff, and he attested the parliamentary election of 1450.
Yet while the outline of our MP’s career as a Leicester burgess is clear, it is more difficult to discuss his role as a county landholder. The location of his lands has to be inferred from actions sued in the central courts of common law. In the 1440s and 1450s he brought various actions for minor offences against his property at Nether Broughton and nearby Melton Mowbray, some miles to the north-east of Leicester, at Little Glen (where he had a fishery), and in the parish of Aylestone, a few miles to the south of Leicester. In 1453 he brought an action in respect of close-breaking at nearby Blaby. He may also have held lands further to the south at Walton-by-Kimcote, for his son is described as husbandman of that vill when a defendant in an action of 1448.
Reynold also had further property in the right of his wife, Agnes Spraty.
Whatever his origins, John Reynold established a family which continued to play an important part in the affairs of Leicester long after his death. His son and heir twice held the office of mayor, and Richard Reynold, who was in all probability his younger son, was acting as town clerk by 1452. Indeed, Richard enjoyed a successful career as a local lawyer. Since the end of the 1440s he had been acting as an attorney for Leicestershire suits in the court of common pleas, and in 1457 he leased the property of Sir Thomas Erdington* at Braunstone near Leicester before buying it outright for 44 marks in 1466.
