John’s precise relationship to Thomas Rokes II* has not been discovered, yet that they were kinsmen is strongly suggested by the way that he followed the older man into the service of the Crown, and the various points of contact between them in the course of their careers. Our MP may well have been the relation named John to whom Thomas left 66s. 8d. in his will of 1458.
Although Thomas Rokes settled in Buckinghamshire, John chose to live in Berkshire – at least in the 1430s and 1440s – probably as this was most convenient for the performance of his official duties. Significantly, he took up residence at Hinton Waldrist, a manor in the Thames valley which formed part of Queen Katherine’s dower. He became well known in Wantage, a few miles to the south, where he testified at the inquisition post mortem for (Sir) Richard Hankford* in 1431, and conveyed land to William Borde* and his wife later in the decade.
The Crown continued to make use of Rokes’s skills as an administrator in the localities in the 1440s. Thus, when Walter Strickland I* died in office as escheator of Hampshire and Wiltshire in the spring of 1446, Rokes was assigned to take his place, and he was appointed to the same office in Oxfordshire and Berkshire in November 1448. Shortly before that appointment, in April 1448, and as a belated reward for his good service to the King’s mother and the King himself in carrying out his difficult tasks as receiver of Wallingford, he was granted a licence to export 40 sacks of wool every year for the next seven years, without having to resort to the staple at Calais.
Although his landed holdings had continued to link him with Berkshire, after losing his receivership of the dowager queen’s estates Rokes had entered the service of William Aiscough, bishop of Salisbury; and for many years he officiated as bailiff of the episcopal liberties in Somerset and Dorset in the employment of Aiscough and (following his murder in June 1450) his successor Richard Beauchamp. Probably for this reason he took up residence at Sherborne where the bishop had a castle.
The date that this John Rokes died has not been ascertained. He entered a bond for £50 in October 1464 to his namesake, the younger son of the late Thomas Rokes II and executor of his will;
