Perhaps the most obscure of all fifteenth-century knights of the shire for Cambridgeshire, this MP was possibly related to the Skeltons of Cumberland, one of whom, Sir Thomas Skelton†, made his way south in Richard II’s reign and established himself in Cambridgeshire and Hampshire. There is, however, no basis for the assertion that John was actually descended from Sir Thomas, all of whose children predeceased him.
Conceivably John was the John Skelton who was pardoned in June 1424 for marrying Margaret Aylesbury without royal licence.
It is surprising to find that the MP should ever have become a knight of the shire, since he never held any other appointment in Cambridgeshire. The only firm evidence relating to him comes from the summer of 1426 when one of the servants of John Skelton of Steeple Morden, esquire, became involved in a fracas at the Cambridge gaol delivery. Trouble arose after an argument between one Thomas Dore, a yeoman from Somerset, and a juror, Robert Couper of Arrington. When Couper left the guildhall Dore attacked him on the street outside, striking him on the arm with a sword. Dore and Skelton’s servant, Godfrey Brichefeld, apparently an accomplice, subsequently secured themselves in a room at an inn and refused to surrender either to the sheriff, John Hore*, or to other Crown officers present. At length, the assize judges delivering the gaol, William Babington and William Westbury, came to the scene and arrested them, causing an unruly crowd to gather. Later on the same day, Skelton and Thomas Chalers† took custody of the two men and undertook to ensure that they would appear before the King’s Council, first in the autumn and then at the Cambridge gaol delivery on the following 24 Feb. At the latter date, Dore and Brichefeld failed to appear but they and their mainpernors were present at the next gaol delivery in July, when they were each amerced 20s. and each of the mainpernors 6s. 8d.
