The earlier biography of this ‘beloved brother’ of the Speaker William Stourton and supportive uncle of the future Lord Stourton, revealed him to have been a man dedicated to public service, of proven probity, and of firm religious orthodoxy who devoted his considerable energies to the support of the Church.
Another wife has been added to the three previously recorded, for in April 1411 Stourton settled on this wife, Thomasina, the manor and advowson of Pendomer, which he had purchased four years earlier.
As a conscientious member of the Somerset bench, to which he was regularly named as one of the quorum, Stourton attended sessions more often than any of his fellow justices.
Among Stourton’s closest associates not mentioned previously was William Bochell*, the sometime MP for Melcombe Regis, who acted on his behalf as a feoffee, mainpernor and ultimately executor. The two men sat together in the Parliament of 1429 (both being returned by Stourton’s nephew John Stourton II as sheriff of Somerset and Dorset). While that Parliament was in progress, in November 1429, Stourton was engaged in two suits in Chancery. The first related to four messuages in Taunton which some 30 years earlier Robert Bathe† had conveyed to a group of trustees for the support of a chantry chaplain in the local parish church of St. Mary Magdalen. Since no licence to alienate had been obtained, the messuages had been taken into the Crown’s possession and committed to Stourton and Sir Thomas Brooke* in 1427: the trustees now challenged their title. The other concerned the Somerset manors of Ninehead Flory and Withiel Flory, and involved Stourton as an associate of Sir Giles Daubeney* and Ralph Bush*, his fellow Members of the Commons (Daubeney sitting as his fellow knight for Somerset, Bush as MP for Dorset).
