No trace of a Robert Shelford has been found. It may be speculated that the MP was a kinsman of one or other of the three contemporary clerks employed by the Crown who all shared his surname. The first, Henry Shelford, is most likely to have been related to the MP. A ‘King’s clerk’ who had strong connexions with Weymouth and its neighbouring port Melcombe Regis, he had been active on the Isle of Portland in 1404, three years later he was appointed to supervise the controllers and collectors of customs and subsidies at Melcombe and adjacent ports, and himself took up the post of collector not long after. Later in life appointed a tax assessor for Dorset, he became parson of Wyke Regis, and joined Master Adam Moleyns, the clerk of the Council and dean of Salisbury, and the prominent local merchant Henry Russell* alias Gascoigne in founding the guild of St. George in Weymouth, by royal licence of 1442 (although he did not live to see the completion of the endowment in 1455).
biography text
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Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
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