The connexion of the Trenthams with Shrewsbury can be traced back to 1384 when William Trentham, a saddler, was admitted to the gild merchant. He went on to serve as assessor in 1406-7 and 1416-17, and his putative son or grandson, Thomas, also a saddler, held the more important position of coroner in 1430-1 and was one of the 25 electors of the borough officers in 1434.
In 1455 Trentham became the first of his family to serve as bailiff. His term of office appears to have been a troubled one. A chronicle of the town written in the reign of Elizabeth I reported that, while Trentham was bailiff in 1455-6, Queen Margaret ‘gave bages’, and our MP and John Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury, ‘varyed and had either of them a man slayne’, a juxtaposition perhaps intended to suggest that the two events were linked. Unfortunately the contemporary legal records provide no confirmation of this story, and there is no indication of the grounds of Trentham’s disagreement with the earl, with whose father the Trenthams had been on friendly terms.
Such episodes had no impact upon Trentham’s career. From the mid 1450s until the late 1470s he was one of the town’s principal men of business, entrusted by his fellow townsmen with both office and important tasks. Early in 1459, for example, he was paid by the borough to ride to Wenlock, in company with Roger Eyton* and 30 horse, to witness the hanging of two Lancashire men, who had committed a series of offences against the townsmen.
Trentham’s career continued to flourish in the 1460s. Early in the decade, probably in 1462, he joined the ranks of the aldermen. He had been too young to figure among the original body of 12 nominated under the new borough constitution of 1445, but he was the third man to be added as existing members died.
Although he did not hold borough office after 1473, Trentham remained a leading townsman for a few years longer. In 1474 he farmed a tenement with a garden by ‘Le Cornmarket’ from Thomas Mytton† at the considerable rent 12s. p.a. On 1 Jan. 1478 he was named among the attestors of the Shropshire county election, although, if this implies that he held property outside his native borough, no record survives of these holdings. A few months later, on 10 Apr., he headed those who swore to observe the new ordinances for the governance of the town laid down by Anthony, Earl Rivers, and John Alcock, bishop of Worcester; and at the end of the year he again acted as a juror at the town’s curia magna.
Evidence from the end of Trentham’s life shows that he had interests further afield. On 14 Feb. 1476 John, son of a wealthy London mercer, John Middleton* (d.1477), granted all his goods to four trustees, including a draper, Roger Trentham, who was presumably a younger son of our MP. A Chancery case dating from soon afterwards gives this transaction a context. The younger John Middleton and his brother, Stephen, petitioned against our MP and another prominent man of Shrewsbury, Thomas Thornes. They alleged that a bond in £100 that they had entered into to the defendants bore the condition that, within a month of his father’s death, the John should make a sure estate to his wife, Katherine, of property in the parish of St. Lawrence in Old Jewry, London. Clearly this bond was part of a marriage settlement, and it is a reasonable assumption that Katherine was the daughter of either our MP or Thornes. If the petition is to be credited, the two Shrewsbury men, in the elder John’s lifetime, then took away both the bride and goods of the Middletons worth as much as 500 marks, suing the petitioners at common law for the younger John’s understandable failure to make the settlement on the wife who had abandoned him. Trentham’s reply reveals no further information: he denied both the condition and the alleged offences, for which the petitioners had already sued him and Thornes at common law.
Trentham’s descendants maintained and extended the family’s importance. His son, Thomas, also a draper, served, as he had done, as many as four terms as bailiff, and his grandson, another Thomas†, sat for the borough in Parliament on at least two occasions. Richard†, son of the younger Thomas, made a career in the royal household, sufficiently benefiting from the dissolution of the monasteries to advance the family to the ranks of the wealthy gentry. His lease of the lands of Trentham priory in Staffordshire raises the probability that the family name reflected their place of origin. In a later generation a daughter of the Trenthams, a maid of honour to Queen Elizabeth I, married Edward de Vere, earl of Oxford.
