It was probably this Henry Spencer who appeared in the Exchequer in the Michaelmas terms of 1447 and 1448 to present the accounts due from Edward Langford* for the shrievalty of Oxfordshire and Berkshire, for he later acted as a feoffee of Langford’s estates.
Spencer’s return for Wallingford to the Parliament summoned for 6 Nov. following was most likely made in the interest of the Crown, since he was by then attached to Henry VI’s chamber.
While so engaged in Henry VI’s service, Spencer was returned to his second Parliament, again as a representative for Wallingford. The main business of the Parliament, held at Coventry from 20 Nov. 1459, was the attainder of the Yorkist lords for treason. The victory of the latter at the battle of Northampton in the following July, placed the King’s retainers, such as Spencer at risk of losing their privileged places in the Household. Furthermore, as Spencer’s petition to the Yorkist chancellor George Neville, bishop of Exeter, makes clear, he was also in financial difficulties. His plea concerned a five-year lease he and John Golok had taken of the parsonage of Chalke in Wiltshire. To satisfy a debt owed by the lessor, a cleric named Leysan Jeffray, they had agreed to pay £20 of the annual rent of 100 marks every year for four years to Richard Caunton, the archdeacon of Wiltshire. Caunton, who was given the procuracy of the parsonage, persuaded them to enter obligations to him for the £80 due, but then he and Jeffray fell out, and the latter revoked the procuracy and put Spencer and his colleague out of the farm after just two years, leaving them ‘grevously sewyd and troublid’ for the £40 remaining of the debt.
Spencer remained in obscurity until Henry VII seized the throne. His devotion to the Lancastrian dynasty had not been forgotten, for he not only won back his former place as a yeoman of the Crown, but was granted on 27 June 1487 a life-annuity of £10 from the revenues of Berkshire, backdated to Easter 1486. Furthermore, a petition was presented to the King by the Commons in the Parliament of 1489 for the reversal of Spencer’s attainder, in view of his faithful allegiance and true service to the new King’s uncle Henry VI, and this was duly granted.
