The mercer William Swenge is not known to have played any part in public life prior to his election to the Parliament of 1429, and it is tempting to speculate whether the business to be transacted motivated him to seek election. There were a number of petitions concerned with trade, and the burden of the first parliamentary grant of a fifteenth and tenth of Henry VI’s reign would also have been borne by the mercantile community. Undoubtedly, Swenge commanded some respect among his neighbours, for just a week after the Lords and Commons assembled on 22 Sept., he was chosen portreeve of Taunton, an office which he would occupy on two subsequent occasions in 1434-5 and 1441-2. During the 1430s Swenge also invariably formed part of the delegation of the townsmen dispatched to the shire court to report the result of Taunton’s parliamentary elections.
The exact extent of Swenge’s property cannot be established, but it included three messuages, two tofts, seven and a half acres of land and two acres of meadow in Taunton and ‘Galmeton’ which he acquired from William atte Wode and his wife by 1427.
