A member of a prominent family of Derby, Henry Spicer poses problems of identification. He was probably the spicer of the town who was defending a plea of debt as early as 1423, and if this is the case then he is more likely to have been the uncle than the brother of the Derby MP of February 1449. No more, however, is known of him until his election to Parliament in 1442.
Although clearly a merchant on some scale, Spicer generally appears in the records as either a grocer or a spicer. In 1447 it was as a grocer that he offered a pledge in the court of King’s bench for the payment of fines by 44 of his fellow townsmen, and in 1452, when sued for debt by the wealthy London draper, Ralph Josselyn†, he and his putative nephew are described as spicers.
