The Savilles had been established in the West Riding from at least the mid twelfth century. They added progressively to their estates through marriage. The most significant of these marriages was that of our MP’s grandparents, Sir John Saville† (d.c.1399) and Isabel Elland, who brought the family the manors of Elland and Tankersley (both in the West Riding and held of the duchy of Lancaster honour of Pontefract). Sir John, a noted soldier, represented Yorkshire in five Parliaments between 1376 and 1390 and developed very close ties with the house of Lancaster. In 1374, ‘pur un grant somme’, he purchased from John of Gaunt the wardship and marriage of the heiress of the senior branch of the Thornhill family. He married her to his younger son, Henry.
Thomas Saville had begun his adult career even before the extent of his expectations became apparent. He benefited from the forfeitures after the Scrope rebellion, probably because he had played an active part in its suppression. On 28 May 1405 the rebels murdered Sir Thomas Colville† of Coxwold (Yorkshire), as a supporter of their principal opponent, Ralph Neville, earl of Westmorland. Ironically, Colville left one of the ringleaders of the rebels as his heir, namely a distant cousin, John Percy of Kildare (Yorkshire), and as a consequence of Percy’s forfeiture, Saville shared a grant of the keeping of the Colville manor of Nunwick in the North Riding in the following November.
None the less, Saville was not idle in this period of waiting. Significantly for his family’s later history, he maintained its connexion with the dukes of York, who, as lords of Wakefield, were a powerful presence in the immediate neighbourhood of the Saville estates. At some date shortly before 20 Nov. 1399 Edmund, duke of York, had appointed Thomas’s uncle, Sir John Saville (d.1405), as his chief forester in Sowerbyshire and Holmfirth and keeper of his park of Erringden.
It was about this date that Saville inherited his mother’s manor of Thornhill and her other estates. She was alive in 1415, but was dead in 1416 when her feoffees, headed by John Leventhorpe I* and our MP’s brother Henry Saville of Copley, conveyed her manor of Foulridge to Thomas and his wife, Margaret, and their issue.
Just as Saville inherited his mother’s lands, a difficulty arose in respect of part of his grandmother’s Elland inheritance. This had earlier been divided between her, as heir general of the family, and the heir male, Thomas Elland. By an agreement of 1372 the manors of Brighouse (near Elland) and Carlinghow (in Batley) and a moiety of the manor of Tankersley had been reserved for the heir male with Isabel taking the other moiety of Tankersley, the manor of Elland and the Elland lands in Lancashire.
Now one of the wealthiest gentry of the West Riding, Saville turned his attention to expanding his family’s connexions through marriage. On 26 Feb. 1427, by an indenture dated at Thornhill, he agreed with the guardians of John Hopton that their ward should marry his daughter, Margaret. Hopton, although the representative of an illegitimate line, stood to acquire by settlement the inheritance of one of another rich West Riding family, the Swillingtons of Swillington, should his cousin, Margaret, wife of Sir John Gra*, remain childless. By 1427 it was nearly certain that she would do so, and since Swillington lay only a few miles from Thornhill it was natural that Saville should have considered the young Hopton a suitable marriage candidate for his daughter. He probably also calculated that the match could be made on favourable terms: there was discord between the quality of Hopton’s birth and the value of his expectations. The terms of the marriage indenture reflect the singularity of Hopton’s position. It was agreed that, at ‘what time of good fortune any of the reversions falle’ (in other words, on the death of either Margaret Gra or her sister-in-law, Joan, widow of Sir John Swillington), the bride was to have a substantial jointure of 40 marks p.a. In return, Saville agreed to provide a portion of 400 marks within four years of this settlement. This appears a large sum, the sort of portion given to daughters of only the richest knightly families, but it was not, in this case, as large as it appears. From it was to be deducted all that he had spent on the maintenance of the young couple between their marriage, which was to take place at Thornhill at the close of Easter 1427, and the settlement of the jointure. As it happened this period was to be a short one, for Margaret Gra died a little over two years later.
Soon after Margaret Gra’s death Saville gained a social promotion that was justified by his wealth if not by his recorded military activity. He was a knight by 20 Jan. 1430, when described as such as witness to a deed, and the most likely occasion for that promotion is the coronation of Henry VI at Westminster in the previous November. No list survives of those knighted on the coronation’s eve, but there is every reason to suppose that Saville and his West Riding neighbour, William Gascoigne*, were among them.
By far the most interesting episode in Saville’s life came towards its end. On 29 Oct. 1441, in the church of St. Mary Bishophill in York, he took as his second wife, Christine Lancaster. Materially the match was an excellent one from his point of view: she was heir to a share of the inheritance of the ancient Westmorland family of Lancaster and her brother-in-law was the influential and well-connected Thomas Haryngton I*, a substantial landholder in both Lancashire and Yorkshire. The latter had been instrumental in promoting the match. By Haryngton’s own account, he had come to York the previous day to discuss with the Savilles (our MP and his eldest son, John), the possibility of a double marriage: that of Christine to Sir Thomas and that of his own daughter, Joan, to John’s young son, another John. Discussions concluded, he then went to see Christine in her house at Bishophill and overcame her expressed reluctance to marry by threatening her with the loss of her dower and jointure in the Haryngton lands. The match was thus made with the bride making her vows, ‘moaning and weeping, with tears on her face’. Thereafter she continued her resistance. On arrival at the manor at Thornhill, she refused consummation. Saville, seemingly more reasonable and kindly than Haryngton, offered her £40 to accept their marriage before agreeing that they should live separately, he at Thornhill and she at Elland. These facts were related when, on 31 July 1443, Christine secured the annulment of the marriage before the consistory court at York.
On 8 Jan. 1442, in the midst of this unfortunate affair, Saville was elected to Parliament. He was eminently well qualified by wealth and rank for election, but, as less prominent and active than most of Yorkshire’s MPs, he was still a slightly strange choice. Haryngton’s return for Lancashire to the same assembly suggests that their desire to sit was related to the disputed marriage. However, the main interest of Saville’s election, if not the explanation for it, lies elsewhere. The indenture witnessing his election in company with that of a much more important man, Sir William Euer*, lists as many as 451 attestors. No previous indenture for any county had named more. It is usually assumed that long indentures denote a contested election, but in this case an alternative explanation is to be preferred. The point at issue may have been the mode of election rather than the identity of the elected. Until the electoral statute of 1429 it had been the tradition in Yorkshire that the indentures named only the attorneys of the more important suitors of the county court, and it may be that in 1442 the wider county community sought to exploit the statute, which established the 40s. franchise, to break the monopoly of the greater suitors. On this reading the abnormally long indenture marks their victory. Such an argument is persuasive, but it does not preclude the possibility that Saville had taken particular measures to secure his own election. He certainly chose a favourable opportunity in that the presiding sheriff, Sir William Gascoigne, was his son and heir’s father-in-law. Further, the attestors included both his son, Sir John, and another John Saville, presumably of the Copley branch of the family (Sir John’s own son, another John, was probably too young to attest), together with his son-in-law, John Hopton, and other men known to have been associated with him.
This election to Parliament marked the apogee of Saville’s public career, and it also stood very near its end. Although he was included on the pricked list for appointment as the Yorkshire sheriff in both 1442 and 1443, he was not chosen, and he was not appointed to any further commissions of local government after the tax distribution and loan commissions issued immediately after his Parliament.
Little more is known of the aging Sir Thomas. Late in his life he was involved in an interesting suit. In Michaelmas term 1449 a prominent lawyer, John Gargrave*, who had been among those present at our MP’s abortive wedding in 1441, sued him for failing to pay him his fee as retained counsel. Gargrave claimed that, as long before as 1418, when he was just embarking on his career, Saville had retained him for the extraordinarily long term of 60 years with an annual fee of 26s. 8d. and that this fee was now in arrears by 48 marks. The court gave Saville licence to negotiate, and deferred the case to Hilary term, but by then the knight was dead.
Although Saville’s career was largely colourless, he has left a surviving memorial. He was responsible for adding the north chapel to the church of Thornhill: the inscription on one of its windows still proclaims, ‘Orate pro anima Thome Savill militis qui hanc capellam fieri fecit anno Domini MCCCCXLVII’.
