The family name of this MP was probably derived from the Somerset forest of Selwood. Members of the family settled in Wells in the late fourteenth century, and in 1392 John Selwood was admitted to the freedom of the city without payment, on condition it could be proved that he was the son of a burgess. Another John stood pledge for him. Ten years later William Selwood was admitted by patrimony, and he in turn stood surety for the admission of his son Henry, the future MP, on 29 July 1423.
Over the years from 1429 to 1447 Selwood stood as pledge for the admission of nine burgesses to the freedom of Wells, among them two future MPs (Peter Shetford* and John Grype†). Those admitted included a butcher, a cordwainer, a tucker, a carpenter, a brewer and two chapmen.
Before he represented Wells in the Parliament of 1439, Selwood had served a term as constable there and had on occasion been chosen as an arbiter in disputes between other inhabitants of the city. In the previous year he had been one of the jurors who indicted two ‘gentlemen’ of Wells, John Rewe senior and junior, on serious charges of rebellion and counterfeiting.
In the summer of 1441 Selwood appeared as a feoffee of the manor of Long Critchell, in east Dorset, in association with the chancellor, John Stafford, bishop of Bath and Wells. He was probably acting in the interest of Thomas Langford alias Goldsmith* of Wells, whose mother was one of two coheiresses of the manor.
Selwood’s name was listed early in February 1448 among those appointed to collect money for the repair of the water conduit at Wells, but it was crossed out before he did so. This may indicate that he died about this time, although a suit brought in the common pleas early in 1450 by the executrix of Geoffrey Mone* named him as a defendant in a plea of debt. He is not recorded thereafter, and his wife Edith certainly became a widow within the next eight years. One of their sons, Richard Selwood, was admitted to the freedom of Wells by patrimony in August 1455.
