A mercer, Selowe enjoyed a career in civic government spanning some 40 years from his election as cofferer of Canterbury at Michaelmas 1446. In the following year he began the first of his terms as a jurat, a position he held in July 1450 when he was among those citizens who received a pardon in the aftermath of Cade’s rebellion.
An alderman of Canterbury by Michaelmas 1463, Selowe was elected mayor of the city a year later. During this first term in the office he received Edward IV’s queen, Elizabeth Wydeville, then making a pilgrimage to the shrine of Thomas Becket, and presented her with a silver cup, decorated with pearls and weighing 30oz., and 20 marks in gold.
For some years after these turbulent events, Selowe’s official responsibilities were confined to his city’s financial affairs. In 1472-3 he was one of the five men appointed to audit the accounts of its chamberlains,
The evidence for Selowe’s private activities is far more limited but they were not restricted to Canterbury. In February 1449, for example, he assigned his goods and chattels in London to John Mulling*, Thomas Prowde and a draper from the City, John Harnell, by means of a deed describing him as ‘of Canterbury, mercer, alias haberdasher, alias husbandman’.
