The Strelleys, whose pedigree can be traced back to the reign of Henry I, were one of the most ancient and wealthiest families of Nottinghamshire. In the thirteenth century they had added substantially to their long-held property at Strelley near Nottingham through remunerative marriages, the most profitable of which was that of Sir Robert Strelley (d.1302) to Elizabeth Vavasour of Shipley in Derbyshire. She brought with her lands ideally situated to supplement those the Strelleys already held: the manor of Shipley, lying just across the border from Strelley, and that of Bilborough, immediately adjacent to the family residence. These acquisitions left them with a remarkably compact estate, their only outlying lands being at Ferrybridge and Friston near Pontefract in the West Riding, and they added very little to this property until the failure of the family in the senior male line at the beginning of the sixteenth century. None the less, their long-held patrimony was sufficient to ensure they remained among the leading families of their native shire. They had a fine tradition of parliamentary service: our MP’s great-grandfather, Sir Sampson†, represented the county four times between 1368 and 1383, and his grandfather, Sir Nicholas†, once, in 1394. Junior branches, established at Woodborough and Hathersage, also provided MPs, the most notable of whom was Richard Strelley† of Woodborough, a royal servant, who sat eight times for the county in the 1330s.
Our MP’s father had not played a significant part in the affairs of the county because he did not inherit the family estates until late in life. Indeed, he never held one of the main administrative offices in his native shire, although he did serve as the sheriff of Staffordshire in 1434-5 (an appointment he owed to the lands he held in that county in right of his second wife, Joan, widow of Sir Thomas Harcourt (d.1420) of Ellenhall, and to an association with Humphrey, earl of Stafford, later duke of Buckingham).
This prosperity was threatened by the survival of his stepmother. By a fine levied in Hilary term 1435 his father had made a generous settlement upon her: she was given a life interest in the the family’s caput honoris, the manor of Strelley. Robert resorted to subterfuge to overturn a settlement that was so threatening to his interests. An earlier conveyance gave him the necessary pretext. Early in the reign of Henry IV his grandfather, Sir Nicholas, had conveyed the bulk of his property, including the manor of Strelley, to a group of feoffees including the Derbyshire lawyer, Peter de la Pole†. Strelley now sought to show that these feoffees had remained seised until after the death of his father and thus that the jointure settlement was invalid. This, at least, is the conclusion to be drawn from a letter from Pole to Strelley dated 12 Jan. 1439. Pole stated, in reply to an inquiry from the latter, that he did not remember reconveying the lands to Robert’s grandfather, but that he could not answer for his co-feoffees. He concluded by saying what his correspondent wanted to hear, namely that if any deed of re-enfeoffment was produced he would disavow it unless it was sealed with his seal of arms or signet.
Although the evidence is conflicting, it is likely that this was a dishonest ruse on Strelley’s part, perhaps trading on a leading lawyer’s inability to remember all the conveyances in which he had been involved. The jurors in his father’s Nottinghamshire inquisition post mortem, sitting four days after Pole wrote his letter, gave an account that served our MP’s interest. They referred to the feoffment made by Sir Nicholas; described Pole as the only survivor of these feoffees; and claimed that our MP’s father had entered on Pole’s possession to levy the final concord of 1435.
Having so neatly disposed of his stepmother’s claims, Strelley consolidated his property rights by, in July 1441, suing out of Chancery an inspeximus and confirmation of the charters of Henry III that had given his family free warren in their demesne lands in Strelley, Shipley and elsewhere.
The marriage, whether coincidentally or not, marked the moment when Strelley’s public career began. He appears on the pricked list for the shrievalty of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire in November 1442, when the marriage must have been in negotiation if not already contracted; appointment to the county bench followed early in 1444; and he was named as sheriff in 1445. He also attracted the patronage of the local baronage. In April 1443 William, Lord Zouche, from whom he held his manor of Shipley, appointed him to the chief stewardship of his estates in the locality at an annual fee of £2, and in June 1444 Lord Abergavenny appointed him as steward of Oswaldbeck at a more generous annual fee of eight marks.
Strelley remained active in local administration for the rest of the decade, being appointed to various ad hoc commissions and occasionally sitting as a j.p., as he did, for example, seven times from October 1455 until his removal from the bench in November 1458.
Strelley’s service as a Household esquire does not seem to have inspired him with any lasting enthusiasm for the Lancastrian cause, and it is probable that his connexion with the Nevilles through Lord Abergavenny influenced his political affiliations more strongly than his period in the Household. In this context it may be significant that his brother John was involved with the Yorkist Humphrey Bourgchier* in a major act of disseisin in Nottinghamshire in December 1457.
During the parliamentary recess in December Strelley was reappointed to the county bench from which he had been removed in 1458 for reasons that are not likely to have been political (22 commissioned j.p.s were reduced to 15). After Edward IV’s accession he continued to play an active part in local administration. Indeed, it may be that he was considered a staunch supporter of the new regime, and it is not impossible that he had been knighted on the Yorkist side at the battle of Northampton. In February and March 1462 he sat on the bench when indictments were taken against those responsible for plundering the property of two of the leading Yorkist supporters in the county, Henry Pierrepont† and Richard Illingworth*.
One can only speculate on what prompted Sir Robert to abandon his Yorkist allegiance in 1470. Given his association with the Nevilles through Lord Abergavenny, a strain may have been placed on his loyalty by the growing division between the King and the Nevilles. Alternatively, an indirect connexion with George, duke of Clarence, may have been a factor. His daughter, Joyce, was the wife of Humphrey Salway of Stanford-on-Teme (Worcestershire), who had been marshal of the Lancastrian court during the 1450s and was now the head of a family very closely associated with the duke. Equally speculatively, judgements against him in the Exchequer of pleas in 1469 may have weakened his Yorkist allegiance: damages and costs totalling £45 were awarded to John Wenlock*, Lord Wenlock, and Richard Forde for his failure to pay them sums assigned on the issues of his shrievalty during his last term in the office. But whatever the explanation, he was among those who, with Clarence and Richard Neville, earl of Warwick, had their lands seized in April 1470 in the aftermath of the aborted Lincolnshire rebellion, and, in the following month, he was removed from the county bench. In these circumstances, it was natural that reappointment should come during the Readeption, and that he was nominated to the commission of October 1470 to arrest felons in Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire.
Strelley’s support for the Readeption proved to be more than simply passive. He fought in the earl of Warwick’s ranks at the battle of Barnet on 14 Apr. 1471 but, fortunately for him, he was thereafter able to benefit from Edward IV’s desire for reconciliation. Although, on 11 May 1472 before royal commissioners of inquiry sitting at Barnet, he was one of many indicted of treason for their participation in the battle, he was allowed to sue out a general pardon on the following 17 Aug. Two weeks later, on 30 Aug., a royal signet letter ordered Henry, Lord Grey of Codnor, and the other unnamed occupiers of his estates to allow him full possession of them; and his rehabilitation was complete when he appeared in the court of King’s bench on 16 Oct. to plead his pardon in bar of the indictment.
Nevertheless, although Strelley was restored to his lands, he did not recover his place in local affairs. Not until the accession of Henry VII did he again appear on the Nottinghamshire bench and by then he was too old to resume the position he had lost. He did not survive long into the new reign, dying at Strelley on 17 Jan. 1488.
Shortly before his death he was allegedly the victim of a significant robbery. According to a case in the Nottingham borough court, brought by his three sons after his death, two townspeople had, on 12 Jan., forcibly entered their father’s house in the town and carried away a chest full of silver cups and spoons, worth over £100, and a coffer containing 950 marks in cash.
Although Sir Robert’s will does not survive, some information about his family is provided by that of his brother-in-law Thomas Kemp, bishop of London. In February 1489, Kemp left £20 to each of his two nephews, Sir Nicholas and Thomas Strelley, and £10 to each of their sisters. These were surprising bequests when one considers that his sister, whose marriage had linked the two families, had died 30 years before. The fact that their elder brother John is not mentioned strongly implies that he was Sir Robert’s son by his first marriage.
