With the exception of Thomas Compworth*, Edwin Stannop is the most interesting of those elected to represent Northampton in the reign of Henry VI. There is nothing other than his surname to connect him with the wealthy gentry family settled at Rampton in Nottinghamshire, and his origins are to be sought elsewhere. He first appears in the records as early as 1421 when he brought an action of trespass against a husbandman of Ecton, a few miles from Northampton, and it is a fair surmise that he was born in the vicinity of the county town.
As with many other lawyers Stannop appears to have had an aggressive attitude to his neighbours. On 11 June 1433 he appeared before Reynold, Lord Grey of Ruthin, as one of the county j.p.s., to find surety of the peace to a townsman, William Louke. In a petition to the chancellor in the mid 1430s, Henry Stone*, then mayor, complained that Stannop had disinherited ‘de sa Imaginacion et covyn’ the hospital of St. Leonard of unspecified lands, with the result that the hospital could no longer discharge its social and religious function. The mayor’s interest in the matter lay in the burgesses’ ownership of the advowson of the hospital, which was an immediate neighbour of our MP in Far Cotton and Hardingstone.
Nothing, however, in Stannop’s earlier career prepares us for the last and most striking appearance in the records. In the Coventry Parliament of 1459 the Commons presented a petition to the King against 25 men ‘notariely and universally thorough oute all this your Realme famed and noysed, knowen and reputed severally, for open Robbers’. Among them were such notorious felons as William Tailboys* and Henry Bodrugan† and it is surprising to find also included the name of one ‘Owen Stanhop, once of Northampton, yeoman’.
