Sir William was the representative of a junior branch of one of the principal gentry families of the West Riding, the Tempests of Bracewell. By his time, this branch had enough property by marriage to rival the senior branch in wealth. Our MP’s father, Richard, the younger brother of Sir John Tempest of Bracewell, married two important heiresses. The first inherited the manor of Hartforth (in Gilling) and other property in the North Riding. The second, as heiress of the family of le Gras, brought a more scattered inheritance, comprising the manor of Studley near Ripon and other lands in the West Riding with the manor of Trafford Hill (in the parish of Egglescliffe) in county Durham.
Sir Richard’s success on the marriage market was matched by his success as a soldier. After service in France in the 1340s, he held a series of important military commands in the north, culminating in his appointment in 1367 as warden of the east march. He was also closely connected with the Percys. In April 1351 Henry (d.1368), son of Henry, Lord Percy (d.1352), rewarded him with a grant of the reversion of the manor of Hetton (in Chatton), Northumberland, expectant on the termination of his brother’s life estate.
John was succeeded by our MP as his younger brother. Nothing is known of William before June 1396 when he was named, along with his cousin Sir Richard, to a commission to make arrests in Yorkshire. There is no direct evidence of his involvement in the usurpation of 1399, but he probably sided with Ralph Neville, earl of Westmorland, in support of Henry of Bolingbroke. It is suggestive that, on 1 Dec., he joined with one of the earl’s servants, Sir Thomas Colville† of Coxwold, in offering surety when the new King granted to the earl the keeping of the Yorkshire lands forfeited by Thomas Mowbray, duke of Norfolk. His knighting during this period similarly implies involvement. He was a knight by 8 Apr. 1401, when, again with Colville, he appeared in the chancery of the bishop of Durham to find surety not to impeach a pardon granted by the bishop. The most likely occasion for his knighthood is the new King’s expedition to Scotland in August 1400.
It was about this date that Tempest extended his estates by marriage. His wife was the only daughter of Sir William Wessington and thus heiress to the valuable manor of Washington held in chief of the bishop of Durham. Wessington was dead by 15 Oct. 1399 and it is probable that the marriage had taken place by then.
Tempest and his wife also had difficulty in making good her title to the Wessington lands in Westmorland at Helton Flecket and Brampton Patrick. In 1412 they sued formedon against William Lancaster and Elizabeth, his wife, and their title remained in doubt until the late 1420s. At the assizes at Appleby on 15 Sept. 1427 they won damages of £40 against George Warwick and his wife, Elizabeth, who was presumably Lancaster’s widow, for disseising them non vi et armis of their Westmorland property.
Tempest, in these early years of his career, was also faced with a dispute with his late brother’s widow, Mary, now the wife of Nicholas Gascoigne. By a fine levied in Easter term 1405 he and his mother, in confirmation of the agreement made in 1390, settled an annuity of 20 marks on the couple for Mary’s life in return for the surrender of their interest in the manor of Studley Roger. Later, in Michaelmas term 1408 the Gascoignes had an action for dower pending against Tempest, but this may have been a collusive action designed to secure a formal allocation of dower.
These myriad complexities in his circumstances may explain why Tempest played so little recorded part in public affairs during the reign of Henry IV. He may also have found himself embarrassed by the divisions between the two great northen families of Percy and Neville that dominated the first half of the reign. His own connexions, as far as they are reflected in the surviving records, appear to have continued to be with the Neville earl of Westmorland, but his family’s historic association had been strongly with the Percys. Further, his brother Nicholas was among those who rebelled with the Percys in 1405 and 1408, for which he was fortunate to be pardoned.
Under Henry V, however, Tempest became more active. Although there is no evidence that he participated in the Agincourt campaign, he indented to serve under Edmund Mortimer, earl of March, in the expedition which culminated in the duke of Bedford’s naval victory at the mouth of the Siene on 15 Aug. 1416. Again, however, as with so much else in his career, even this proved not to be straightforward. With other of the earl’s men, he was accused of ending his service prematurely and a commission was issued for his arrest. He and the others protested that they left with the duke’s permission and on the following 13 Oct. they were released from the threat of arrest on their mainprise to appear before the King in person. No doubt the matter was satisfactorily resolved and in July 1417 he once more indented to serve under Mortimer.
With a period of military service in France behind him, Tempest’s standing was no doubt augmented, as, by the death of his elderly mother on 13 Aug. 1421, was his wealth. New property, however, brought him a new problem, one that may have prompted him to seek election to Parliament. The bishop of Durham granted him full seisin of his mother’s manor of Trafford Hill on 3 Nov. 1421, but on 29 Mar. 1423 he was obliged to appear before the bishop’s justices to defend his possession against a rival title on an ancient entail. Obstructive pleading allowed him to delay the action, but it is interesting to observe the coincidence in timing between this action and his only election. On 23 Sept. he again appeared before the bishop’s justices, pending the adjournment of the case to Westminster, and four days later he secured election to represent Yorkshire in Parliament.
Tempest was soon faced with a new legal difficulty of his own. On 3 Sept. 1426, at the assizes at York, damages and costs of 30 marks were awarded against him for a disseisin at Sawley. More significantly, on 12 July 1427 the Exchequer ordered the sheriff of Yorkshire to distrain him, as the tenant of his father’s lands, to render account from his father’s service as the sheriff of Berwick and Roxburgh in the late 1360s and early 1370s. It is not known why this claim should have been made against him after so long a passage of time, but Sir William had a ready, if rather contrived, defence. In the following Michaelmas term he appeared personally in the Exchequer to plead that since his father had made his will at Hetton in Northumberland his debts to the Crown were extinguished by the pardon granted to the men of that county in answer to a petition presented in the Parliament of 1402.
In the late 1420s and early 1430s Tempest was involved in two of the major events in northern politics, namely the famous causa de Heron, which began with the murder of his friend, William Heron of Ford, in 1428, and the challenge to the liberties of the bishopric of Durham in 1433. On 22 Jan. 1428 Heron met his death either, depending on which of two accounts is to be credited, in leading an assault on the castle of his neighbour John Manners† at Etal or in an ambush laid by Manners. A year earlier the murdered man had named Tempest among his feoffees in the manor of Ford, and it was this connexion that explains why our MP should have been named by the Crown to the commission named on 8 Feb. to investigate the circumstances of the death. On the following 19 Mar. he was among the commissioners, headed by Sir Robert Umfraville, a patron of both Tempest and Heron, who took indictments at Newcastle-upon-Tyne placing the blame for the death on Manners. Thereafter a settlement was mediated with our MP acting as one of the negotiators on the part of the Herons.
The last ten years of Tempest’s life were less eventful. In October 1438 he acted as a juror in the inquisition taken at Boroughbridge on the death of Sir William Ingleby, for whom he had reluctantly declined to act as godfather some 30 years before. In November 1439 he and other feoffees of William Heron succeeded in traversing an inquisition that had falsely found that, at Heron’s death, seisin lay in Heron’s hands rather than in those of feoffees.
No such difficulty attached to the marriage of Tempest’s own son, William. By 3 Mar. 1440, when Sir William settled his manors of Hartforth and Stainton on the couple, William was married to the well-connected Elizabeth, daughter of the famous soldier, Sir John Montgomery*, by a sister of Sir Ralph Butler, who was to be raised to the peerage in the autumn of 1441.
Tempest’s successor, the newly-married William, was to have a much briefer career. By that date he had been deputed to act as deputy to his wife’s uncle, Lord Sudeley, as chief butler of England in the port of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
This succession of an infant raised a threat to the survival of the Tempests of Studley in the male line, for, unlike many northern families, their lands were not settled in tail-male. That threat was soon to be realized. John was dead by 9 Apr. 1450 when an indenture of partition was drawn up between our MP’s grandson, John Norton, on the one part, and his surviving daughter, Denise, and her husband, William Mallory of Hutton Conyers. Subject to the dower interest of our MP’s widow, the Mallorys were to have the Yorkshire manors of Studley and Linton-in-Craven and the Durham manor of Trafford Hill, and all the rest of the lands that descended to our MP from his parents were to pass to the Nortons.
The male line of our MP’s branch of the family was perpetuated in an illegitimate line through his son Roland. Illegitimacy did not prevent Roland enjoying a successful career. A collector of customs in Newcastle-upon-Tyne from 1433, he married Isabel, daughter of Sir William Elmden* by one of the four coheiresses of Elizabeth, niece of Sir Robert Umfraville (d.1436). Our MP was a close associate of the wealthy Umfraville and had placed his bastard son in Sir Robert’s service. The match was thus a natural one, and from the Tempests’ point of view profitable. Sir Robert adopted Isabel as his heir in respect of the manors of Holmside and Whitley in county Durham, and a new branch of the Tempest family was thus establisned at Holmside. Roland’s grandson, Sir Thomas Tempest†, represented Newcastle-upon-Tyne in the Parliament of 1529-36.
