Although it is possible that the same John Spicer represented Derby in the Parliaments of December 1421 and February 1449, it is more likely that two men were involved, not improbably father and son, both following the trade of spicer. An indication of where the two careers are to be divided is provided by the parliamentary election returns. The MP of 1421 is named as an attestor or mainpernor to every election between 1425 and 1429, but the name does not occur again in the indentures until 18 Jan. 1449 when John Spicer appears as an attestor to his own election. This John then attested the four following elections between October 1449 and July 1455 before himself disappearing from the returns.
Aside from his appearances as an attestor, almost all that is known of the younger John’s career concerns his role as one of the leaders, alongside Thomas Bradshaw* and Elias Tyldesley*, of a confederacy of townsmen against the town’s neighbour, the abbey of Darley. According to bills laid before the justices of oyer and terminer in September 1454, Spicer was involved in three separate offences. On 24 May 1452 he was among a riotous assembly of 200 townsmen who broke the closes of the abbey at Little Darley and Little Chester, and by threatening he monks and servants of the abbey prevented the holding of divine services there for four days. Later, on 12 Nov. 1453, he was one of a smaller group of 30 townsmen, who, despite receiving writs of subpoena to appear before King and council at Westminster (presumably to answer for the earlier offence) broke a close of the abbot in Derby and assaulted three of his servants. More interestingly, on the following day, he and others rang the bells of the church of All Saints, ‘discordie videlicet Awkewardly’, as a signal for the gathering of an armed band of 300 men which then went to throw down the close and hedges of the abbey at Little Darley. A petition presented by the abbot to Richard, duke of York, as Lord Protector, shortly before these bills were laid before the visiting justices, suggests that these incidents were merely the most notable in a continuing campaign of intimidation. The abbot complained of ‘the grete thretes and manasses hadde dayly’ which his house was suffering, particularly since the visitation of the duke to Derby early in July 1454, and asked for surety of the peace against 21 townsmen, the most notable of whom was Spicer. None the less, despite the apparent seriousness of the conflict between abbey and town, Spicer and his confederates were able to put themselves back on the right side of the law on payment of a small fine. Spicer also had other legal difficulties at this time: in Trinity term 1453 a writ for his outlawry was issued at the suit of John Strelley* for close-breaking in Derby.
Little is known of Spicer’s trading interests, but they extended beyond the confines of his native borough. On 27 May 1449, for example, he acknowledged a debt of £120 before the mayor of the staple of Westminster to a London grocer; and in 1452 he was defending actions of debt sued against him by the wealthy London draper, Ralph Josselyn, and a leading merchant of Nottingham, John Ilkeston.
