When the infant Henry VI came to the throne, the Shorditches, an upwardly mobile Middlesex family, already had traditions of parliamentary service stretching back several generations. The family’s fortunes were established in the reign of Edward II by two brothers, Sir John, a Crown servant and diplomat, who rose through the ranks of the royal administration to become keeper of the rolls of the King’s bench in 1323 and a baron of the Exchequer in 1336, only to be murdered by four of his own servants in 1345, and Nicholas (d.1358), who then inherited his brother’s property. Nicholas’s son, John, represented the shire of Middlesex in at least seven Parliaments between 1363 and 1390, and was followed into the Commons by his synonymous son, the father of the MP of 1426.
The second John Shorditch died in 1407 in his own father’s lifetime, and could thus leave his young son his best chest for the storage of muniments, but no landed property that might have brought such documentation with it.
In the first instance, Shorditch’s inheritance was diminished by the survival of his grandmother, and his reduced income may go some way to explain his apparent failure to play any part in public life for more than a decade after his grandfather’s death.
Equally, and again in marked contrast to his grandfather, he only sat in the Commons once, and there may be some significance in the fact that the only Parliament he is known to have attended was that summoned to Leicester in 1426. It is possible that he had by this date been drawn into the wider circle of Cardinal Beaufort, at whose behest the Lords and Commons were summoned to the Midlands, for a few years later he found sureties for Lewis John*, a prominent member of Beaufort’s circle, in his acquisition of the wardship of one of the daughters and heirs of (Sir) Richard Hankford*.
His avoidance of office apart, Shorditch took the place in the local community for which his wealth predestined him. He was an apparently regular attender at the shire court, and during the period of Henry VI’s minority frequently set his seal to the parliamentary election indentures sealed there. Equally, he appears to have been well regarded by his neighbours. Among the men who called upon him to attest their property deeds were royal officers, such as the under marshal and former clerk of the Commons Thomas Haseley†, and London merchants like John Gedney*,
Shorditch appears not to have been a litigious man, although he was not afraid to prosecute in the royal courts the kinds of petty transgressions with which any medieval landowner had to contend. Thus, in 1429 he sued a husbandman from Hackney for killing his dog, while in 1447 he appeared before the justices of King’s bench to charge two men for breaking and entering his house at Northcote.
