Sturmy’s elections to Parliament for Ludgershall in 1422 and Marlborough in 1423 are to be ascribed to the influence of his father Sir William, who as chief steward of Queen Joan’s estates and custodian of Ludgershall could ensure the return of his nominees, while Marlborough was the administrative headquarters of Savernake forest, of which he was hereditary warden. In 1422, the first Parliament of Henry VI’s reign, John was accompanied to the Commons by his nephew of the half-blood, John Seymour I* (Sir William’s grandson and legitimate coheir), and his cousin Robert Erle* (sitting for Great Bedwyn). All three newcomers were introduced to the House by Sir William himself, sitting for the county in what was to be the last of at least 12 Parliaments. As a former Speaker and established parliamentarian, he certainly knew the ropes; conversely, his kinsmen would be present in the Commons to lend him their support. In the return for Wiltshire John Sturmy and his cousin Erle are named as Sir William’s mainpernors.
While attending Parliament the kinsmen probably all stayed in the aged knight’s house in the parish of St. Brigid, a short walk from Westminster. John Sturmy was there again for the two sessions of the Parliament of 1423-4, and it was in Sir William’s house that both he and Erle witnessed the patriarch’s will on 20 Mar. 1427. In that testament Sir William left his son a precious covered cup, and named him, Erle and William Tourney as his executors.
John’s illegitimate birth meant that he could not expect to inherit any of Sir William’s ancestral estates, and he willingly lent his support to the coheir Seymour, with whom he remained on amicable terms for the rest of his life. He witnessed a transaction later in 1427 whereby a body of feoffees, headed by Bishop Polton of Worcester, conveyed to Seymour a number of manors belonging to his inheritance.
Sturmy may have still been living at Axford, some three miles to the east of Marlborough, when he was returned to Parliament for the third time, early in 1431. On this occasion he represented the borough of Great Bedwyn, situated not far away in the same part of eastern Wiltshire. It was at Marlborough that he served as a juror at inquisitions post mortem on (Sir) Richard Hankford* in May 1431, Joan, Lady Cobham, in March 1434, and John Stapilhull in April 1437.
No further appointments to public office had followed after Sturmy’s commission of nine years earlier, and of his private affairs little is recorded, save that he sued a husbandman of Bedwyn for a debt of £14: the man obtained a pardon of outlawry in 1438.
Some 18 years later William was a defendant in a suit brought in Chancery by John Kirkby and Anne his wife. The Kirkbys claimed that Anne’s uncle Maurice Hommedieux† had held a messuage in Bedwyn and some 100 acres of land nearby, of which he had enfeoffed John Sturmy and his heirs, to hold to his use. After the deaths of Hommedieux and Sturmy, William had allegedly kept the property for himself, taken the profits of £5 p.a., further wasted the estate to the tune of £72, and refused to relinquish Anne’s inheritance.
