Perhaps related to the John Swyney serving as a coroner in Worcestershire at the beginning of the fifteenth century,
There are no specific details for Swyney’s property at Worcester although he was found to possess freeholdings in the city worth £5 p.a. for the purposes of the subsidy on lands granted by the Parliament of 1431. He helped to assess its inhabitants for this tax, since he was a member of a jury panel which gave evidence to the visiting subsidy commissioners in November that year.
The Worcestershire election return for the Parliament of May 1413 provides the earliest known reference to Swyney. It was a combined return, for both the knights of the shire for the county and the burgesses for Worcester, but in all likelihood he had only taken part in electing the city’s representatives. By the mid 1420s he was one of the most important men of the city, and he was returned to his only known Parliament while bailiff of Worcester, an office in which he served several terms.
A ‘gentleman’ and lawyer, this latter Thomas was frequently employed at the Exchequer. In March 1462 he stood surety there for the clerk of the pipe, Nicholas Lathell,
