It was as ‘of Beverley’, another borough in the East Riding, that Spencer purchased the freedom of Hull in 1424.
Clampard’s suit identified Spencer as a ‘merchant’ and a couple of customs accounts show that he imported iron worth £13 6s. 8d. in 1452-3 and exported a small quantity of unfinished cloth seven years later.
The first office Spencer is known to have held at Hull was a Crown appointment, that of a searcher of ships, which he took up alongside Richard Scoles* on 1 Feb. 1438. He and Scoles assumed their responsibilities in spite of a lawsuit that their predecessors, Robert Haddlesey and Robert Beaume, had begun against them just two days earlier. Haddlesey and Beaume informed the barons of the Exchequer that Spencer and Scoles, along with Adam Douce, a woolman from Beverley, and 16 other unknown accomplices, had assaulted them and prevented them from carrying out their duties. On the following 12 Feb. Spencer and Scoles appeared before the barons in person and entered a plea of not guilty. Douce, however, could not be found and thereafter the case was continually postponed from term to term amidst problems in assembling a local jury. It was still pending when Scoles died in late 1440 or early 1441.
By January 1447 Spencer was an alderman, and his status as of one of Hull’s leading burgesses was reflected in a royal pardon, referring to him as a ‘gentleman’ as well as a merchant, that he obtained on the 20th of that month.
In July 1455 Spencer was again nominated for the Commons. On this occasion the commonalty did not choose him, although he put his name to the indenture naming Richard Anson and Nicholas Ellis* as the town’s MPs.
Following the end of his impromptu mayoralty in September 1461, Spencer served another term as one of the coroners of Hull. In early 1463 he was again elected to the Commons, this time alongside Hugh Clitheroe, but in the event neither of them sat. Originally summoned to meet at York on 5 Feb., the Parliament was twice postponed, and when the sheriff of Hull held a fresh election on 3 Apr. William Eland and John Day† were returned to the Commons instead.
By now Spencer was nearing the end of his life, and he made his will on 5 Sept. 1464. Unusually for an alderman, he sought burial in the small parish church of St. Mary, to which he left 40s., rather than that of Holy Trinity. He left property in Hull that had once belonged to Simon Bedale to his eldest son, Simon, with remainder to three other sons, Thomas, Edmund and Nicholas, and a daughter, Joan, and he also gave his younger children £10 each. The remainder of his property there he left to the mayor and commonalty, with instructions that they were to establish a priest in St. Mary’s to pray for the souls of himself and his first wife, Katherine, and of Simon Bedale and his wife, Margaret. He made further provision for his spiritual welfare in the form of bequests to the mendicant orders in the town, and by instructing his executors to fund a priest from the sale of his goods to sing for his soul for one year. Spencer provided for his widow, Joan, by assigning her all his property in Beverley for her lifetime with remainder to his heirs. He appointed his wife and eldest son as his executors, along with the chaplain, Thomas Dalyson, and John Titelote*. He was dead by 30 Sept. 1464, when John Day was elected an alderman in his place, and probate was granted on the following 4 Nov.
