Saverey was one of several Southwark MPs in this period who practised a trade in London and belonged to one of the City guilds, in his case that of the tailors. Rather than serve an apprenticeship as a tailor, however, he obtained the freedom of the City by redemption in 1410-11, at a cost of £3, which suggests that his financial resources were already quite substantial. Indeed, on payment of a further 20s., he was admitted the same year to the livery of his chosen craft, marking the start of a successful career as a member of the tailors’ fraternity, dedicated to St. John the Baptist. In October 1429 he was elected as one of the four wardens for the ensuing year, and 11 years later he was chosen as master of the guild. Yet, in other respects he kept a relatively low profile within the craft: he enrolled few apprentices and contributed only occasionally to levies raised by the master and wardens, such as that raised in 1439-40 to pay for the new charter acquired by the guild from Henry VI.
Saverey’s limited presence in London is explained by his activities in Southwark, where he lived from at least 1417, when he was a juror at an inquisition post mortem concerning the lands of Sir Adam Francis† in the borough.
If Saverey’s connexions in London never propelled him into the ranks of the city elite, he was nevertheless able to contract a marriage to a city widow, Juliana, the former wife of the mercer William Brounyng. Juliana brought with her three children from her first marriage, who had each been left £10 by their father, but all died while still minors, two in 1420 and the third in 1433. On each occasion Saverey appeared before the mayor and aldermen to reclaim the legacy on behalf of his wife.
The focus of Saverey’s religious life lay in the bankside parish of St. Margaret’s, Southwark. In 1444-5 the churchwardens’ accounts listed ‘ii bellis of sylver ... that Julyan Saverey gaffe’, and in 1457 the accountant recorded some vestments ‘that Pers Savereyn hath freely graunted and yeven to God & to the chirche of Seynt Marget’. The vestments, which included four copes of blue and gold, were said to have cost £117, which reveals something of Saverey’s wealth at the time of his death. They were probably provided by his executors out of his estate, although the gift is not referred to in his will.
Saverey made his will on 3 June 1457, asking to be buried by the altar in St. Margaret’s church. He established an obit there for ten years, for his soul and that of his late wife, leaving ten marks for the purpose, of which 13s. 4d. was to come from the three messuages in St. Gregory’s parish which he had acquired from Walter Green. The properties themselves were left to his elder daughter, Joan, with reversion to his other daughter, Alice Rule, who was to receive his tenements in St. Botolph’s Bishopsgate in London and in Frindsbury. In addition to these tenements he also left 20s. for the upkeep of his principal mansion for three weeks after his death. It is likely that this was not the full extent of his landed holdings, however, for as well as his two daughters he also had a son, George, who was not left any property in the will yet was old enough to be appointed an executor and, with his sisters, was left the residue of his father’s estate. Among Savery’s other bequests were sums of money for his servants and an apprentice, as well as 6s. 8d. to be divided among the inmates of the almshouse of the Tailors’ Company in the parish of St. Martin Outwich, indicating a continued connexion with the guild in London. The other executors of the will, proved on 7 July, were the testator’s son-in-law, John Rule, and Thomas Salle.
