The Rodneys were of great antiquity, established in Somerset by the end of the eleventh century. When Henry VI came to the throne, the family could already look back on almost a century of parliamentary service. One of Walter’s ancestors had represented Somerset in the Parliament of September 1336, and other members of the family had sat for the shire on repeated subsequent occasions. The line was only broken after the death in 1413 of Walter’s grandfather (who had been returned for Somerset in 1406), for Walter’s father, Sir John, apparently never sat in the Commons. He died in May 1420 just seven years after succeeding to the family lands, and aged only about 33. His untimely death left his son and heir a minor aged just five, and since Sir John, although a substantial landowner, had not been a tenant-in-chief, the heir and his estates became the subject of a struggle between the feudal overlords. Part of the Rodney estates were held from the honour of Gloucester, and these were now seized by Richard Beauchamp, the newly created earl of Worcester, but it seems that the heir himself was successfully claimed by the abbot of St. Mary Graces in London, who granted custody to the boy’s maternal grandfather and uncle, Sir John and Sir Oliver St. John.
Walter was not, however, to remain with his mother’s family for more than a few years. It seems that some part of the family lands was held in chief, for Rodney recalled later that he had at one time been the King’s ward, and by the mid 1420s his wardship had come into the hands of Walter, Lord Hungerford, probably by royal grant.
Rodney came of age in about 1436, but he may have secured livery of his inheritance rather sooner, for by the summer of 1431 he was engaged in litigation over some of the family property in Dinder.
Before long, and almost certainly with the help of his father-in-law, Rodney assumed the place in county administration for which his wealth qualified him. In October 1439 he took his place on the county bench, and less than a month later he was pricked sheriff of Somerset and Dorset.
If such a performance raised any eyebrows among the career administrators at Westminster, it was hardly noticed in the ranks of the Household which Rodney had joined by the summer of 1441, undoubtedly once again through Lord Hungerford’s good offices. By the autumn of that year, he was receiving robes as a King’s esquire,
Rodney’s relations with his neighbours were generally cordial, although his closest links remained with members of the Hungerford circle. Thus, he was frequently among the witnesses or feoffees named by Lord Walter and his son and heir, Lord Robert (d.1459), in their property transactions,
As the kingdom descended into open civil war in the second half of the 1450s, Rodney was more than once called upon to rally the men of Somerset to the King’s banner, but there is nothing to suggest that he took a prominent part either in support of Queen Margaret, or of the duke of York and his adherents. Nevertheless, his role in arraying the men of Somerset against the exiled Yorkist lords in the winter of 1459-60, were sufficient to ensure that the administration of the new King Edward IV should regard him with some suspicion. Consequently, he was removed from the Somerset bench in early 1461 and not entrusted with even minor local commissions until the summer of 1463. It may have been the greater proximity of his son and heir to the Yorkist regime which saved him from more serious disgrace, for Thomas Rodney was sufficiently trusted to be charged within weeks of Edward’s accession with the delicate task of seeking out and capturing the duke of Exeter’s servant Alexander Hody*, whom the new rulers were anxious to seize and punish for his part in the death of the duke of York at the battle of Wakefield.
Although by no means an old man, Rodney now began to put his affairs in order. One central concern at this time seems to have been title to the Somerset manor of North Load. This had been settled on Sir John Rodney by William Norlod, more than half a century before, but had been forcibly seized during Walter’s minority by Nicholas Frome, abbot of Glastonbury. Rodney petitioned the chancellor, Bishop Neville of Exeter, for appointment of commissioners to investigate the question of the ownership of the manor, pleading that while there were still witnesses ‘of aunciente and credence’ to the original enfeoffment alive, they were ‘gretelie aged, decrepite and right feble, not liklie long to life ne endure’. The subsequent inquiry, held before the dean of Wells, Nicholas Carent, and the royal justice Richard Chokke, heard the evidence of 22 witnesses aged between 30 and 95, and including the dean’s own brother, William Carent*. A majority of the witnesses recalled the formal livery of seisin by Norlod to Sir John Rodney some 46 years earlier, remembering how Norlod had ordered all his servants to leave the manor-house, had shut the door, and had placed the ring of the door into Rodney’s hands, but it was the abbot who eventually prevailed: in February 1466 Rodney quitclaimed his rights to the manor.
Sir Walter did not live to see his former master Henry VI return to the throne in 1470, for he died on 17 Jan. 1467, aged about 52. He was succeeded by his 30-year-old son Thomas, who did not survive him for long,
