While not actually resident in the borough that he represented in the Commons, Shirley was by the time of his return at least a Surrey man who was connected with inhabitants of Reigate and its hinterland. In 1444 he acted as a feoffee for Henry Goode of Dorking, and in October 1450, along with a probable kinsman, Reynold Shirley, he was among the witnesses to a gift of goods and chattels made by Thomas Snell of Croydon.
The Act of Resumption passed by Parliament in 1450 deprived Shirley, like many other members of Henry VI’s bloated establishment, of a substantial part of his annual income. He was allowed to keep only £9 2s. 6d. ‘pro corona’, out of his total fees.
