The Spetchleys originally hailed from Worcestershire, taking their name from the family home to the south-east of Worcester. Robert’s father, William, had been a county coroner under Henry IV and Henry V until dismissed in early 1417, ostensibly on the grounds of his age and ill health. This was probably a mere pretext, whether put forward by the authorities or by coroner himself, for Spetchley lived on to set his seal to the Worcestershire election indenture of 1420, and last served as a tax collector in the early months of Henry VI’s reign.
In the absence of any expectations of a further inheritance, Robert appears to have made for himself a career in the law, but he signally failed to rise to any particular prominence. It is nevertheless probable that he owed his two elections for the Wiltshire borough of Devizes to his profession, and the loss of the Wiltshire returns for the Parliaments of 1439 and 1445 raises the possibility that the burgesses sought his services on further occasions. Traditionally, the men of Devizes had tended to return local men established in the cloth trade, but since the early 1430s they had increasingly called upon professional men of law to attend the Commons on their behalf. Thus, in 1437 Spetchley’s parliamentary colleague was a Westminster clerk with no discernible connexions with the Wiltshire town he represented, and his companion in 1442 was equally unencumbered by any personal ties in Devizes, although Henry Long* (unlike Spetchley) was at least of Wiltshire origin. Nevertheless, there is no suggestion that Robert’s candidature was anything other than welcome to the men of Devizes. His parliamentary sureties in 1437 were John Saundres, a man who would not long after hold the mayoralty of the town, and John Fauconer†, a former MP for the borough, while in 1442 the prominent Thomas Coventre II* himself guaranteed Spetchley’s attendance at Westminster.
Although even in June 1447 (when Spetchley stood surety at the Exchequer for Thomas Lyttleton and Robert Westcote, the newly appointed farmers of the alnage in Worcestershire) he was still styled ‘of Claines’,
Spetchley nevertheless disappeared from public life at this point of the late 1450s, and may have retired to his native Worcestershire, where he is found attending the shire elections of 1467 and 1472. Late in life he married for a second time, perhaps in an ultimately futile bid to father a son. While his bride was probably older than the 36 years ascribed to her at the time of her brother’s death in 1500, the difference in their ages was clearly very substantial, and the match produced no issue. Robert’s heirs were thus the four daughters of his first marriage: Margaret, wife first of John Garrold and subsequently of the London notary John Long, and her sisters Elizabeth, Eleanor and Anne. The resulting litigation was complicated by the involvement of Sir Richard Beauchamp†, Lord Beauchamp of Powick, as one of Spetchley’s feoffees, and subsequently by the change of heart suffered by Elizabeth Spetchley, who – probably following her marriage to William Fisher – took her stepmother’s side against her sisters. Not long after her first husband’s death the stepmother, Margery, married the Worcestershire esquire Richard Acton, and their son Robert† went on to represent Southwark in three of Henry VIII’s Parliaments.
