According to the Cumberland subsidy returns of 1435-6 Sir John Skelton was the richest man in the county with an annual income of £118 6s. 8d. This over-estimates his family’s landed wealth in that a significant part of this income was drawn from royal annuities; none the less, the family patrimony, consisting of neighbouring manors at Whitrigg and Threapland with other outlying properties, was sufficient to ensure his heirs a place among the leading gentry of the county.
This energetic service recommended Skelton to Henry V. As early as 16 Jan. 1416, when the King confirmed to him his annuity of 20 marks from the Hull customs during the minority of Richard, duke of York, he was described as a royal esquire. Later, like many other soldiers, he was given a stake in the success of military conquest in France. On 30 Mar. 1419 the King granted him forfeited lands to the value of 600 sous in the bailiwicks of Caen and Côtentin to hold in tail-male; and, on 10 Jan. 1421, he had the lesser grant of two tenements (one ruined) in Harfleur in fee at 2s. 8d. p.a.
If Skelton continued to fight in France after 1422, his military activity has left no clear trace on the surviving records. He did, however, find a place in the service of another royal duke. In both 1415 and 1417 his elder brother, Richard, had fought in France under the banner of Henry V’s younger brother, Humphrey, duke of Gloucester; this, together with John’s own recommendations as a soldier, help to explain why, in September 1423, the duke granted him a generous life annuity of £20.
Skelton continued to serve Duke Humphrey into the late 1420s and beyond. On 19 Nov. 1429 he received assignment in the Exchequer on the duke’s behalf; and on 3 Jan. 1435 he joined the duke’s receiver-general, Nicholas Thorley, in standing mainprise for their master’s purchase of a valuable marriage from the Crown.
Further grants followed, as Skelton’s elderly father, himself a friend of the duke, sought to maintain his own grants from royal patronage in the hands of our MP, who, since his elder brother’s death in 1430, had been Sir John’s heir apparent. Late in 1435 Sir John surrendered his own grant of a purpresture at Armanthwaite, also in Inglewood forest, to the intent that his son might have the property for the term of his life and then for a further term of 40 years. On 25 June 1437 he made a similar surrender of a more important grant, that of five closes in the same forest, a valuable property from which the Crown reserved a rent of over £15; this was then re-granted to him and John in survivorship.
With Sir John’s death, Skelton finally entered into the family patrimony. On 19 Feb. 1439 his father’s feoffees surrendered their title to the manor of Whitrigg and he presumbly secured his father’s other properties at the same time.
The Crown also recognized the burdens placed upon Skelton by terms as sheriff in a county where the farm had been seriously eroded by border warfare. In June 1446, during his second term, he was granted a general pardon, and in November 1447 he was rewarded with the protection of an exemption of office.
Exemptions of office were not infrequently granted to those who had had distinguished military careers, and it seems that, despite his advancing age, Skelton’s exploits in the field were not yet over. In the late 1440s intermittent border skirmishes between the English and the Scots gave way to open warfare. On 23 Oct. 1448 an English force, commanded by Henry Percy, Lord Poynings, was heavily defeated by the Scots at the river Sark. Poynings, together with Sir John Pennington* and (Sir) Thomas Haryngton I*, are known to have been captured, and a royal grant of 1452 shows that Skelton was taken and ransomed at about this time. If, however, he was captured at the battle (as seems likely), his detention, like that of Pennington, was only brief, for both men appear among the attestors to the parliamentary election held at Carlisle on the following 21 Jan.
Six months after the conclusion of his first Parliament, Skelton was pricked as sheriff of Cumberland for the third time despite the exemption he had secured three years earlier. According to his own petition, he initially refused to serve, ‘for certaine causes resounable’ declared by him before the royal council. His agreement was only brought with the promise that he might account by oath, in other words, for what he could raise rather than for the full charge of the county. Later he won an additional privilege with the pardon of account in the sum of £70 granted to him on 14 Feb. 1451.
Skelton’s second election for Cumberland was conducted in an atmosphere of tension and division as relations between the two great northern families of Percy and Neville drifted towards open hostility. The indenture suggests that it may have been contested. It names no fewer than 154 attestors, far more than in any other surviving fifteenth-century indenture for the county. The election was not held until 13 Mar., a week after the Parliament had begun. This delay was an inevitable corollary of the unusually short interval allowed between summons and meeting, particularly in the northern counties when county courts were held only every six weeks rather than four, and is not in itself evidence of any irregularity. Of greater significance is the dominance of the Neville interest among the attestors, who were headed by one of the earl of Salisbury’s younger sons, Sir Thomas Neville. Further, the election was conducted by a sheriff, Thomas de la More*, who also numbered among the family’s supporters. In these circumstances, it is not surprising that both of those elected can themselves be connected to the Nevilles, although by no reference pre-dating the election.
If, however, Skelton was elected as a Household esquire in the service of the Nevilles, who had yet to alienate themselves from the royal court, it was in support of neither that he acted in the assembly. Almost nothing is known of the actions of individual MPs in medieval Parliaments; Skelton’s conduct in this assembly is a very rare exception thanks to the chronicle of John Whethamstede, abbot of St. Albans. The abbot’s comments provide a valuable insight into the workings of the Lower House, and, incidentally, into our MP’s character and his effectiveness there. The abbot’s interest arose out of the threat to his abbey posed by a bill introduced into the Commons by Henry VI’s half-brother, Jasper Tudor, newly created earl of Pembroke, who asked for a grant in fee of the lands of the earldom, including ‘per expressa verba’ the alien priory of St. Nicholas of Pembroke. This had been granted to the abbey by the late duke of Gloucester in return for prayers for his soul, and thus the bill endangered both the material interests of the abbey and the spiritual needs of the duke. It would, in Whethamstede’s account, have passed without amendment, save for the intervention of a friend of the abbey, Bartholomew Halley*, a royal esquire sitting for Hertfordshire. Halley secretly solicited the assistance of Skelton, who, as a former servant of the duke, had reason to oppose the grant. This he did so energetically (‘ac tam perseveranter in materia laboravit’) that he secured a suitable amendment, protecting the grant to the abbey. Halley, as usher of the royal chamber, had probably been reluctant to oppose the bill publicly for fear of giving offence to the Crown. Our MP’s willingness to act, although he too was a royal annuitant (albeit one less intimately connected to the King than Halley), implies that he did not share that fear.
After his service in this Parliament, Skelton appears to have scaled down his activities. Advancing age may be the main reason, but the increasing divisiveness of both northern and national politics may have been another. Even if, in the early 1450s, he was not as close to the Crown as he had once been, the support of the Nevilles for the duke of York may still have faced him with an uncomfortable conflict of loyalty.
