The Swynnertons of Swynnerton were a family of great antiquity and, for a period in the fourteenth century, of considerable prominence. Humphrey’s ancestor, Sir Roger Swynnerton, prospered under the young Edward III, who granted him the manors of Great and Little Barrow (Cheshire), forfeited by Hugh Despenser, earl of Winchester, and summoned him to Parliament in 1337. Sir Roger died soon afterwards and the summons was not repeated for any of his descendants, but his son, Sir Thomas† (d.1361) maintained a close link with Edward III as door keeper of the King’s hall in the late 1340s and later as one of the custodians of King John of France.
Humphrey Swynnerton was Thomas Swynnerton’s grandson.
During his shrievalty, Swynnerton had an important matter of more personal concern to pursue, namely his marriage to his cousin, the coheiress of the Swynnertons of Hilton, descendants of Roger, Lord Swynnerton’s younger brother, Sir John Swynnerton†. The match had a complicated gestation. The bride’s father, Thomas, son of John Swynnerton†, had died on 31 Dec. 1448, and two weeks later, even before writs had been issued for the routine inquiry into his lands, the wardship and marriage of his heir was granted to Exchequer officials, Thomas Mallory* and Brian Roucliffe.
It might also be that Swynnerton’s nomination as sheriff was connected with his marriage, particularly as, in what can hardly have been a coincidence, the other coheiress became the wife of the escheator, Richard Beaufo. Not improbably the two men used the influence of their offices to help secure the marriages, although, in our MP’s case, the crucial factor was probably his connexion with Buckingham. In any event, he had married Anne by mid-way through his term of office: in May 1450 the couple brought a petition before the chancellor complaining that John Stanley was unlawfully detaining deeds relating to her inheritance.
Over the next couple of years Swynnerton was faced with the routine financial difficulties that arose out of service as sheriff. Not only was he fined for three failures to appear in the Exchequer to account, but in Easter term 1452 another Staffordshire man, William Mynors, an elderly yeoman of the Crown, sued him for failure to pay him his fee of 6d. a day, assigned on the issues of the county. Fortunately for Swynnerton, he secured some protection against such inconveniences later in the same year: when the royal court was at Reading in November he sued out letters of privy seal to the Exchequer, pardoning him his fines and awarding him the standard pardon of account in £40.
No more is known of Swynnerton until his election to Parliament on 26 June 1455. He was returned with (Sir) William Vernon*, who had been in the duke of Buckingham’s retinue in the campaign against Cade, and it is likely that the duke’s patronage was a factor in their return. The prevailing political dispensation had turned very much to the duke’s disadvantage with the King’s defeat a month before at the first battle of St. Albans, and he was probably particularly anxious to have his own men in the forthcoming Parliament. During the course of this three-session assembly Swynnerton found trouble of his own to distract him from his master’s affairs. For an unknown reason, he fell into a violent dispute with a wealthy esquire, John Delves† of Apedale, some ten miles from Swynnerton.
Here the trail of the dispute ends, but at the same time Swynnerton found other perceived foes to sue. In Easter term 1456 he brought an action of conspiracy against two Cheshire gentry, John Savage the elder and younger, claiming damages of as much as £400 against them for having had him falsely indicted of felonious theft before the Cheshire j.p.s. His claim is not to be taken literally, for, if true in every detail, he had been in prison at Chester throughout the first session of the 1455 Parliament.
Soon after this Swynnerton added a term as escheator to his office-holding, and would no doubt, in more peaceful times, have later secured nomination to the county bench and further appointments. That he did not was due to his premature death, although the date and circumstances of that death are matters for speculation. On 22 Dec. 1459 he conveyed his wife’s lands to feoffees headed by his lord, the duke of Buckingham, and including the local lawyers, Thomas Everdon* and John Harper*; and he was still alive in Michaelmas term 1460, when he sued his kinsman and neighbour, Thomas Swynnerton of Butterton, for close-breaking at Acton. This rules out the possibility that he fell with Buckingham at the battle of Northampton.
By the time of his death, Swynnerton’s wife may have inherited her share of her patrimony, for in the commission of 1461 Humphrey is described as ‘late of Hilton’.
