The most obscure of Worcestershire’s knights of the shire in Henry VI’s reign, John was returned to the Commons alongside Fulk Stafford*. Fulk was very probably a kinsman but neither man’s place in the pedigree of the Staffords, a family that established branches in several counties in the west and south-west of England over the course of the fourteenth century, is known.
Possibly he was the son of another John Stafford, an esquire with interests in Worcestershire and Staffordshire who died in August 1421. The latter’s heir was his son and namesake, then an infant aged about four, and the King committed the child’s wardship to a lawyer from the latter county, William Lee*, in February 1422.
It is also possible that the MP was the John Stafford associated with the much more prominent Humphrey Stafford III* of Grafton in 1457. In July that year Humphrey stood surety, under pain of £1,000, that John Stafford of Hook Norton, Worcestershire, esquire, would appear before the King in Chancery in the following Michaelmas term. At the same time, John gave a like undertaking, under the same pain, for his own appearance there. Whatever the reason for the securities, the pair were probably related since the Staffords of Grafton held a manor at Hook Norton, John’s place of residence.
Thanks to the MP’s obscurity, it is only possible to trace the end of his career with any certainty.
The battle of Northampton enabled the Yorkists to regain control of the government and to summon the Parliament to which John and Fulk Stafford were returned as the knights of the shire for Worcestershire. On 29 Oct., just over three weeks after the opening of Parliament, John was appointed to a commission established to secure the arrest of the Northamptonshire esquire, Robert Tanfeld†. Given the Lancastrian associations of Tanfeld’s father, Robert*, it is tempting to ascribe a political reason for the commission, although it is more likely to have arisen from Tanfeld’s campaign of intimidation against Robert Isham, who had replaced the elder Robert as a j.p.
Parliament closed at some stage after the following 3 Feb., and later that month Stafford accompanied the Yorkist captain John Radcliffe, the self-styled Lord Fitzwalter, to the second battle of St. Albans. The battle, fought on 17 Feb., ended in defeat for the Yorkists. Stafford and others of Radcliffe’s retinue, having retreated to the south-west, spent some time at Bristol. There they vented their frustrations by breaking into the house of a local Lancastrian, William Grey, and stealing and selling his goods. While at Bristol, Stafford and his associates lodged with another townsman, John George, who some years later petitioned the chancellor to complain that Grey’s widow was wrongfully suing him for the lost goods.
Having lost a second husband to a violent death, Margaret Stafford entered a hotly contested marriage with Thomas, son of Thomas Wake*. It proved so controversial because the Oxfordshire lawyer Thomas Danvers*, who had hoped to gain her hand, claimed that she had previously contracted to marry him. Politics may have played a part in her change of mind. Her powerful kinsman, Richard Neville, earl of Warwick, had opposed a match with Danvers, perhaps because of the latter’s past Lancastrian associations, while Wake had committed himself to the new Yorkist regime. Whatever the case, a sorely aggrieved Danvers petitioned the chancellor for redress and in October 1465 a commission was issued for the arrest of the Wakes and their legal adviser, Thomas Pachet*.
