Unusually among those who sat in Parliament for New Romney in this period, St. Leger was not originally from the borough. Its records reveal that he was born at Chadstone in Northamptonshire, but the circumstances in which he became one of its freemen on 14 Dec. 1448, upon payment of a fine of 6s. 8d.,
Like his fellow MP, Robert Scras*, St. Leger travelled to all three sessions of the Parliament of 1449-50, which finally closed at Leicester on 8 June 1450. In fact, his attendance record was better than that of the more experienced Scras, whose parliamentary wages came to £5 13s. 4d. while his own amounted to £6 19s. Unfortunately, the burden of meeting these expenses proved too much for Romney’s municipal purse. It was not until 1452 that the Port settled its debt to Scras but St. Leger, perhaps because he lacked the local influence of his colleague, was never paid in full. In 1454 he accepted a final payment of 40s. for his wages for the Leicester session, leaving an unpaid debt of £2 5s. 8d.
