The pewterer Snawden was one of the more obscure men to represent York in Henry VI’s reign. His parentage is unknown, but he was admitted to the freedom of the city in 1396.
In February 1432 Snawden was elected mayor of York. Within days of his coming to office he was named to a commission to deliver York gaol, but no other evidence of his activities during his mayoral year (apart from the routine witnessing of local deeds) survives. On completion of his term, he resumed his place on the aldermanic bench.
Scant evidence survives of Snawden’s private affairs. He was certainly the most prominent pewterer in the city during the early fifteenth century, with trading contacts across the country. In 1430 he was in dispute with a London grocer, Richard Burton, over a bond for £20. As a result, some of Snawden’s tin and pewter vessels were seized by the sheriffs, but the officers struggled to find buyers for them.
Snawden made his will on 8 May 1438, asking to be buried in his parish church of St. Michael le Belfry. He made bequests of 6s. 8d. for the fabric of York Minster and to each of the mendicant orders in the city. There was also provision for a priest to offer prayers for two years for him and his first wife, Agnes. A servant, Richard Chester, was rewarded with 6s. 8d., while the remainder of Snawden’s goods and chattels were to be disposed of at the discretion of his executors, as was his sole remaining piece of property, a tenement in the Shambles then occupied by the butcher Thomas White. The execution of his will was entrusted to his widow, another Agnes, the tanner Robert Allerton and the pewterer Thomas Peny, who before long were embroiled in litigation over Snawden’s debts. Probate was granted on the following 12 June.
