The family of Roos of Gedney was a cadet branch of the barons Roos of Helmsley. Its founder, Sir Robert (d.c.1311), was a younger brother of William, Lord Roos (d.1316). His descendants were wealthy knights with their principal estates at Gedney, in the parts of Holland, where they were granted a yearly fair and weekly market in 1330, and Hunmanby in the East Riding, both held of the King in chief. They also held other Lincolnshire estates at Wyville with Hungerton (Kesteven), as tenants of the senior Roos branch’s castle of Belvoir, and at Normanby-le-Wold (Lindsey); and they were similarly tenants of the senior branch in their other East Riding lands at Breighton (in Bubwith) and Thorpe Garth in Aldbrough where, from 1332, they also had a fair and market.
The subject of this biography was the son and heir of Sir James Roos, a j.p. in Holland, by a daughter of Sir Philip Despenser of Goxhill (Lincolnshire), promoted to the peerage in 1387.
These lands can have made only an insignificant contribution to Roos’s income. This was assessed at as much as £165 6s. 8d. p.a. for the purposes of the 1436 subsidy, making him the second richest non-baronial landholder in Lincolnshire behind his nephew by marriage, Philip Tilney of Boston. A far more substantial contribution came from the large annual fee of 40 marks he received from Humphrey, duke of Gloucester.
Nor is it only Roos’s public career that is to be explained in terms of his close connexion with Gloucester, for there can be little doubt that he owed his second wife to the duke’s patronage. Following the death of his first wife before March 1422,
Given Roos’s wealth and the status he enjoyed as one of the leading retainers of a royal duke, it is a little surprising that 1422 marked his only return to Parliament. He does, however, appear to have had some influence on parliamentary representation on at least two of the four occasions he conducted elections as sheriff. His neighbours, Sir Robert Hakebeche† and Richard Welby† of Moulton, were each returned for the first and only time when he was presiding over elections in 1420 and 1421.
Sir Robert’s baronial connexions extended beyond the senior branch of his family and the duke of Gloucester. He was also closely connected with the Lincolnshire baron, Robert, Lord Willoughby of Eresby, who in 1421 named him as one of his feoffees and in turn was named by our MP as one of his. This connexion continued right to the end of Sir Robert’s life: as late as 1438, and probably beyond, he was acting as a Willoughby feoffee under another feoffment, while in 1439 he conveyed his Yorkshire manors of Thorp Garth and Breighton to feoffees headed by Willoughby.
Among the gentry Sir Robert’s connexions were varied but drawn principally from the immediate neighbourhood of his Holland and East Riding estates. In June 1415, before departing for France, he conveyed all his manors to a fairly undistinguished set of feoffees, including his neighbours Thomas Meres* (who was to be one of his executors) and John Flete of Frampton, the latter of whom was an executor of his father-in-law, Sir John Rochford. Also numbered among them were three Yorkshire esquires drawn from the vicinity of his East Riding lands.
Sir Robert died in September 1441.
