It is possible that Selwood was the ‘John Selewock’ of Marlborough who was party to a conveyance of March 1399, by which Robert Duraunt transferred a couple of tenements in Kingsbury Street in that town to Selewock and his wife Marion. Over three decades later, on 28 Feb. 1431, John Selwood the younger of Marlborough quitclaimed a tenement in the same street (almost certainly one of the properties of the earlier conveyance) to an elder namesake from the town, perhaps the John Selewock of 1399.
Within a fortnight of the same quitclaim, John ‘Schwode’ and Agnes his wife conveyed the tenement to Thomas West of Avebury and his wife Joan. Evidently, Schwode was a misspelling or variant of Selwood, for attached to the deed of conveyance was the seal of John ‘Selwode’.
In July 1442, over 11 years after the MP’s last Parliament, the Exchequer received an order to pay £240 to two ‘gentlemen’, John Stratton and an unknown John Selwood, for the ordnance they had supplied to the Crown, possibly in connexion with the fortification of Calais.
