Nothing certain is known of the MP’s antecedents but he is likely to have been closely related to William Syward, defendant in an action of novel disseisin at the assizes at Northampton in August 1413.
Some of Syward’s trading profits may have been laid out in mortgages. On 5 Apr. 1456 John Raser, a spicer from Olney in Buckinghamshire, quitclaimed to him, Joan, his wife, and his sons, Thomas and William, a valuable tenement in Abington Street, Northampton; two days later Raser entered into a bond in £59 guaranteeing the Sywards secure possession for a term of 20 years.
Little else is known of the last years of Syward’s long career. In September 1463 he was elected mayor for the second time; in 1467 he offered mainprise on the election of John Ashburn† to represent the town in Parliament; and on 1 Apr. 1469 he was one of four former mayors who joined four ex-bailiffs in arbitrating a dispute between a local mercer and a dyer.
Syward made his will on 25 July 1473. He wanted to be buried in the chapel of Corpus Christi in the town’s church of All Saints. The largest of his many charitable bequests was as much as ten marks to the parish church of Wollaston, a few miles to the east of Northampton. Either this was the place of his birth or he had acquired property there. Several members of his family are mentioned, with the largest bequests reserved for his then only surviving son, William, and his daughter Alice, who were to have ten marks and £5 respectively. Another £5 was to be used to employ a chaplain to pray for his soul in the year after his death. His wife was named as one of his executors.
