The earliest certain reference to Steton, a burgess of unknown antecedents, is his appointment as one of the chamberlains of Kingston-upon-Hull at Michaelmas 1423.
The only known record of Steton’s mercantile activities is a solitary customs account recording that he imported six tuns of wine and a quantity of saltfish in 1453.
Steton combined his duties as controller of customs with a leading role in the administration of his town. By late 1442 he was one of the aldermen of White Friars ward, and at Michaelmas 1447 he was elected mayor, an office which, unusually, he held for two consecutive terms. While in office he was involved in a dispute with the mayor of York, John Karr*, to whom the King had entrusted the task of inquiring into illegal trade with Iceland after the Hull authorities had failed to act on an earlier commission to do so. In 1448 or early 1449, Karr and several fellow York merchants sued our MP, John Spencer I* and Richard Anson*, claiming that the defendants had secured false indictments against them in revenge for the making of that inquiry and that, as a result, the merchants of York dare no longer pursue their commercial activities in the port. This prompted the King to order the Hull authorities to desist from their intimidation on pain of £500.
Within a few months of stepping down as mayor, Steton was elected coroner of Hull at an extraordinary meeting of the town council, and he remained active in municipal government throughout the early 1450s. In January 1454 he was among the aldermen who decided to send the mayor, Richard Anson, to London to plead on their behalf regarding their right to hold the admiralty court in the town. In the following year he attended the disputed mayoral election of Nicholas Ellis*, and he was among the aldermen who decided to banish those who had disrupted the proceedings. His last recorded attendance at a council meeting was on 15 Dec. 1456.
Beyond the evidence provided by his will, there is scanty information for Steton’s personal affairs. He seems, however, to have been particularly close to John Tutberry (d.1433), a mercer and four times mayor of Hull, for in his will Tutberry appointed him one of his executors and bequeathed to him a quarter share in a ship, Le Peter of Hull. Tutberry also named Steton, alongside his co-executors, John Bedford† and John Snayton, as one of the feoffees of a chantry he wished to establish. Shortly after Tutberry died, his widow likewise named Steton, Bedford and Snayton as her executors.
When Steton made his own will, on 2 Feb. 1459, he sought burial in the parish church of St. Mary at Hull and made arrangements for a modest funeral costing only 20s. He assigned robes and a gift of 20s. in cash to two dependants, his apprentice and kinsman, William ‘Stevyngton’, and a servant, William Forster, and a piece of silverware to John Ricard, a local merchant involved in the Icelandic trade. Steton also directed Ricard to deliver a similar piece – previously a gift to the testator from another merchant, Robert Shakles – to the prioress of the convent at Swine in Holderness. Steton left his house in Hull to his widow, Alice, to hold for life; although if she chose to sell it the proceeds were to be divided between Alice and Agnes, the daughters of William Arnald, and John and Thomas, the sons of John Ricard. Steton named Alice as sole executor of the will, for which probate was granted just 12 days later. He appears to have died childless.
