It is conceivable that Scoles was a kinsman of a fellow townsman, John Scales*, whose surname was a variant of his own. It is unclear when he became a freeman of Hull, where there were at least two burgesses named Richard Scoles in the early fifteenth century. One, an apprentice of William Pound, became a freeman there in 1408, and the other, apprenticed to Hugh Clitheroe†, obtained the freedom status seven years later;
In December 1426 the Crown issued a licence to export woolfells and wool free of customs to this Robert Scoles and other Hull merchants, to compensate them for the cargoes they had lost with La Isabella of Calais, a vessel owned by the earl of Warwick that the King’s enemies had sunk off Dover in the previous September.
Apart from his municipal responsibilities, Scoles served briefly as a searcher of ships at Hull, and on one occasion during his term as such he intercepted a consignment of English and Flemish gold coins on a boat sailing out of the Humber.
In the late summer of 1439 Scoles himself saw service on a Hull jury that made presentments for smuggling offences,
Scoles died within a year of the Parliament, either in late 1440 or early 1441, and on 2 Feb. 1441 Thomas Riculf, the attorney representing him and John Spencer against Haddesley and Beaume, informed the barons of the Exchequer that he was no longer alive.
