John belonged to a branch of the Stanley family of Staffordshire which had acquired substantial landed holdings on the Wirral peninsula, including the manors of Great and Little Storeton. One of his ancestors successfully claimed the hereditary forester-ship of Wirral forest, and all these possessions, together with estates that came by marriage to the heiress Margery Hooton, were held by his father, Sir William Stanley. John boasted among his influential relations his uncle Sir John Stanley KG (d.1414), lord of the Isle of Man and founder of a baronial dynasty, and his cousin Sir John Stanley† (d.1437), the steward of Macclesfield,
Well before his father’s death, John had embarked on a career as an esquire in royal service, initially under Henry V, and it was the latter’s widowed queen, Katherine, who appointed him to his first office, that of sheriff of Anglesey. This post he held on a permanent basis from 1425, and by confirmation of her son Henry VI until the end of the latter’s reign 36 years later.
A mark of how highly Stanley was placed in the trust of the King and his council was the role he was given when Eleanor Cobham, duchess of Gloucester, was accused of witchcraft and sorcery in 1441. While her activities were under investigation during the autumn and winter of that year, Stanley assisted the constable of Leeds castle, Kent, to keep her in safe-custody, until in January 1442 she was handed over to his kinsman (Sir) Thomas Stanley II*, the controller of the Household, for conveyance under guard to Chester.
Such was Stanley’s status in the Household when, in 1445, he was returned to Parliament as a knight of the shire for Surrey. He had started to acquire property in the county only relatively recently, by becoming a tenant of Westminster abbey, from which he farmed the tithes of the rectory at Battersea for £10 p.a., and in the same neighbourhood he also took on a 40-year lease of the site of the manor of Bridge Court. As well as this, he held of the abbey eight houses and some 150 acres of land with rights of common for a specified number of livestock on Westheath and Eastheath in Battersea and Wandsworth, for which he paid a rent of 30s. p.a.,
Although not elected to the Parliament of November 1449, Stanley was present while it was in session both at London in March 1450 and at Leicester subsequently. His presence is not, of course, established by the fact that on 4 Mar. he was assigned at the Exchequer the sum of £107 11s. 3d. to cover his costs as a serjeant-at-arms for the past 19 years,
Stanley was also in attendance on the King when Parliament met again at Westminster on 6 Nov. 1450. In the aftermath of Cade’s rebellion and the return of the duke of York to England to express his dissatisfaction with the government of the kingdom, many courtiers came under attack, and the Commons presented a petition for the removal from the King’s presence of certain named persons whom they held responsible for the ills which had befallen the realm. The list, headed by the duke of Somerset and the dowager duchess of Suffolk, included Stanley among other Household men deemed culpable. However, although the King granted the petition, he insisted that those in continual attendance on him, of whom Stanley was one, should remain at his side.
It was probably during this period, when Stanley was a figure of note about the royal court, that he commissioned a handsome manuscript full of the latest Chaucerian verse. This volume, containing the shorter poems of Geoffrey Chaucer† and works by John Lydgate and Charles of Orléans, is revealing of his tastes, and a reminder that life at court was not always subsumed by politics.
Thereafter, he continued to be in close proximity to the King: in June 1456 he received assignments at the Exchequer for the royal chamber, and in the following summer his office at the armoury was granted to him and his son John in survivorship. Although Stanley was described in a pardon of 12 Feb. 1458 as ‘former’ esquire for the body, there is no reason to believe that he resigned from that position within the next 18 months.
Having survived unscathed thus far, Stanley could not escape removal from his place in the Household following the Yorkist victory at Northampton in July 1460, after the King came under the control of the victors. That he was nevertheless reinstated on the Surrey bench in December that year may have been because of his links with Sir Henry Retford, one of the duke of York’s staunchest supporters. Retford, destined to be killed at Wakefield like his lord, had formerly been married to Stanley’s sister Eleanor, and in Edward IV’s first Parliament Stanley was to be granted exemption from the Act of Resumption with regard to any lands in Carnarvonshire and Anglesey of which he was possessed or to which he had any title, following her death.
