The tucker Walter Clerke (also known under his occupational synonym of Towker – for instance on the occasion of his election to Parliament),
Not much over a year after his admission to the freedom Clerke began to make his way through the civic cursus of office holding. He served in the city’s most junior office, the keepership of the streets, for a total of six successive years, and then went on to serve a further three as one of the wardens of the shambles. He was regularly present at the guildhall and was periodically charged with the mediation of his neighbours’ disputes. In May 1458 he stood surety at the Exchequer for the former master John Attwater *, who had acquired the farm of the alnage of cloth in Somerset and Dorset.
The years following his short spell in the Commons saw Clerke acquiring a more prominent position in Wells. In 1460 he was chosen one of the wardens of the parish church of St. Cuthbert, and two years later he became one of the city constables, securing re-election in 1464. That same year he was also among the citizens charged with the audit of the civic accounts.
