As their name suggests, the Troutbecks probably originated from Westmorland. The first member of the family associated with Cheshire was John’s father, a man of obscure background who married a woman from that county, apparently after entering her father’s service. A strong supporter of the Lancastrian dynasty, William Troutbeck fought for Henry IV at the battle of Shrewsbury and probably participated in the Agincourt campaign.
William Troutbeck began his long administrative career in Cheshire upon becoming chamberlain of Chester in November 1412, an appointment confirmed to him during pleasure at the accessions of Henry V and Henry VI.
In addition to these investments, William acquired the wardship of Margery, the infant daughter and heir of Thomas Huls. In May 1421 he agreed to pay the Crown the capital sum of 350 marks for the wardship, along with an annual rent for as long as he remained her guardian.
Technically still a minor when his wife’s estates came into his hands, Troutbeck did not enter public office until the later 1430s. In January 1437 he and his father, both described as ‘King’s esquires’, were jointly appointed to the offices of steward and receiver of the lordships of Hawarden and Mold during pleasure. A month later he was made parker of Pickan in Hawarden, again during pleasure, and in the following May he and his father received a grant in survivorship of the office of parker of the royal lordship of Shotwick, a position which hitherto William Troutbeck had exercised alone. In August 1437 William obtained letters confirming him as chamberlain of Chester. Over the previous quarter of a century he had held the office during pleasure but the new letters granted it to him for life and provided for his son to succeed him as chamberlain (although during pleasure only) after his death.
In April 1444 William Troutbeck gave up an annuity of £10 he received from the issues of the county palatinate, in order that his son should have £20 p.a. from the same source instead. Still alive in the following September,
By the time he became chamberlain of Chester John Troutbeck was already associated with the royal favourite (Sir) Thomas Stanley II*, afterwards Lord Stanley.
In stark contrast to the relationship between Stanley and Troutbeck was the rivalry and suspicion which marked the latter’s dealings with Thomas Daniell. The ambitious and ruthless younger son of a minor landowner from Cheshire, Daniell had won the King’s favour after gaining a place in the royal household, and Henry VI rewarded him with a grant for life of the manor of Frodsham in that county in the spring of 1441. The grant was made on the unconfirmed understanding that the manor was worth no more than £20 p.a., but this was well below its true value. Acting in his capacity as chamberlain of Chester, Troutbeck reacted to the King’s display of careless generosity by actively seeking to thwart Daniell’s grant. On 13 May 1441 he paid a personal visit to the treasurer of England, Ralph, Lord Cromwell, at his lodgings in London to query its validity and on the following day it was revoked at a meeting of the King’s Council. Soon afterwards, however, Daniell first secured fresh letters patent awarding him £20 p.a. from Frodsham, and then prevailed upon the King to supersede these letters with a new grant awarding him an annuity for life of £30 from the same source. Before the end of the same year he recovered possession of the manor itself, having surrendered this latest annuity and undertaken to answer to the Crown for any income beyond £30 p.a. which he derived from the property.
Even if he was fulfilling his duty in querying the original grant, it is unlikely that Troutbeck had played a wholly disinterested role in this affair since he must have feared that Daniell would challenge the important position he enjoyed in the affairs of the county palatine.
In March 1446 Daniell was made steward and chamberlain of Middlewich for life; in September 1447 he obtained a lease of the estates in the county which made up the inheritance of a minor, Thomas Gerard;
Pre-dating the long-running feud with Thomas Daniell was Troutbeck’s quarrel with William Stanley of Hooton, a cousin of Sir Thomas Stanley and head of the main line of the Stanley family. In the autumn of 1438 he and several associates were required to enter recognizances in the exchequer at Chester to guarantee that they would keep the peace towards William of Hooton and John Tildesley, and in the following summer he and Stanley agreed to refer their differences to the arbitration of Sir Thomas. In spite of his friendship with Troutbeck, on this occasion the knight carried out his responsibilities impartially since he ordered the MP to reimburse William for damaging his corn with his livestock, and to compensate him and others for the livestock he had taken from him.
The indictment was just one of a number brought against Troutbeck in June 1450, when he was also accused of numerous misdeeds in the county palatinate between the mid 1430s and late 1440s. These included the wrongful seizure of goods and livestock, extortion and other instances of false imprisonment. It was further alleged that he had harmed the Crown’s interests by failing to render account for an annual rent of 100 marks due to the King from the duchy of Lancaster manor of Halton, and by felling a dozen oaks in Delamere forest.
As these quarrels demonstrate, Cheshire was the focus of Troutbeck’s activities for most of his life but, thanks to his wife’s manor at Oxhey, he was sufficiently identified with Hertfordshire to sit for that county in two Parliaments. Unless his status as an esquire of the Household was purely nominal, he must have spent at least some of his time in the south-east of England. No doubt he found Oxhey useful in this respect, given its relative proximity to London, although he also rented a townhouse in the City and held two messuages in the ward of Aldersgate.
In spite of his membership of the Household, Troutbeck played a leading role in the protests against the inclusion of Cheshire in the subsidy which the Parliament of 1449-50 granted to the Crown. He and the other gentry of the county reacted strongly to this expedient, which ran contrary to the practice of the previous 70 years and was seen as an attack on the liberties of the county palatinate. While the Parliament was still sitting he was ordered to appear in the Chancery to answer certain charges, perhaps in relation to his involvement in the protests. Among those who put his name to a petition the protesters sent to the King, he also personally lobbied Henry VI over the same matter at Blackheath early in the following year. The King backed down in March 1451, by reaffirming Cheshire’s liberties and franchises and agreeing that the county should not have been asked to contribute to the subsidy. Shortly afterwards, however, the government provoked fresh controversy by trying to apply the Act of Resumption passed in the Parliament of 1450 to Cheshire. Once again Troutbeck, who had sat in that assembly as a Member for Weymouth, played a leading role in opposing this new breach of liberties, in the face of which the government was likewise forced to yield. During these protests he was one of the gentry of Wirral hundred who ignored an order to take part in an inquisition held by the sheriff of Cheshire, and he was fined no less than £100 for his defiance. His behaviour was seen as particularly reprehensible given that he was chamberlain of Chester, although afterwards it was officially excused on the grounds that the county’s principal office-holders were not expected to serve on such inquisitions. Troutbeck’s participation in the protests is certainly striking. Possibly he was partly motivated by resentment over Thomas Daniell’s grant in reversion of the office of chamberlain, but it is also likely that he had a genuine desire to defend the rights and privileges his county so proudly possessed. Earlier, in 1441, he had taken part in demanding the reaffirmation of certain of those rights and privileges before Cheshire would pay the Crown a mise, the tax applicable to the county palatinate.
It is conceivable that the government had encouraged the indictments brought against Troutbeck in June 1450, particularly those relating to abuses of office, as a means of warning him not to take his opposition too far. The alleged abuses included the ‘fraudulent’ levying of 50 marks, a sum which was in fact his reward from the county palatinate for his part in the negotiations over the mise of 1441.
Following the Parliament of 1450, Troutbeck is not known to have received any further offices or grants, save for a future lease of the manor of Shotwick, assigned to him in October 1452. Previously the Crown had assigned Shotwick, part of the earldom of Chester, to the late Sir William Porter† and his wife Agnes in survivorship. She was still alive when Troutbeck received his grant, meaning that his lease could not begin until after her death. The terms of the grant were highly advantageous, for he was to have the manor for 50 years at a low rent of ten marks p.a., and it is possible that it was a reward from the county palatinate for his services in lobbying the King about the subsidy of 1450.
Bullying letters were the least of Troutbeck’s worries, for in the same period he was the subject of a petition complaining about his activities as chamberlain of Chester. The petition was addressed to the Parliament of 1453 but it is likely that it was never actually submitted to that assembly, since it exists as a draft rather than an official record. It was drawn up in the name of the treasurer of England, John Tiptoft, earl of Worcester, perhaps at the behest of one of the Troutbeck’s opponents. In the petition, Troutbeck was accused of having made unjust claims for expenses in relation to the manor of Shotwick, then still in the hands of Agnes Porter. He was also alleged to have cheated the King out of the wardship of Hugh Venables of Kinderton, to whom he had married his daughter Elizabeth. The boy was the nephew and heir of Hugh Venables the elder, who had died in 1449 possessed of estates in Cheshire worth some 200 marks p.a. These properties were held directly from the King as of the earldom of Chester, but the elder Venables had conveyed them away to feoffees in order to avoid the feudal incidents due to the Crown when he died. Venables was not the only Cheshire landowner to resort to such an expedient in this period, but the petition claimed that he did so when he was frail and near death and under the sway of Troutbeck. According to the petition, Troutbeck had issued him a licence to alienate his estates under the seal of Chester and then, following the alienation, had acquired the boy’s wardship for himself. The petition further alleged that Troutbeck had used his administrative powers to halt all legal process arising from the indictments taken against him some three years earlier. It called for the King and Parliament to order the justice of Chester, Sir Thomas Stanley, to proceed against him and called for his removal as chamberlain if found guilty. In his response to these articles, likewise recorded in draft form, Troutbeck denied any wrongdoing and claimed that the indictments had come about through ‘Senestre labour’. With regard to the Venables wardship, he asserted that its initial purchaser (presumably from the Crown) was the elder Hugh Venables, from whom he had bought it after the Venables-Troutbeck marriage. He also began to prepare a petition of his own, in which he likewise refuted the articles and other allegations of wrongdoing.
Even if the controversy did not in fact come before the Parliament of 1453, it appears to have prompted the authorities into action. In August that year the indictments of 1450 were brought before pleas of the Crown presided over by Sir Thomas Stanley at Chester, although Troutbeck was formally acquitted of those charges at the beginning of the following year.
By now approaching the end of his life, Troutbeck appears willingly to have relinquished his duties as chamberlain to Tunstall, since Sir Richard was one of the feoffees upon whom he settled his Cheshire estates in early 1457. A powerful group, the feoffees included William Fitzalan, earl of Arundel, John, Viscount Beaumont, John Sutton, Lord Dudley, and Sir Thomas Stanley, now Lord Stanley. Troutbeck did not end his days in the county palatinate, for he died at Oxhey on 26 Aug. 1458.
Shortly after coming into his own, the MP’s heir, the newly knighted William Troutbeck, fell into dispute with his stepmother. Alice Troutbeck began suits in Chancery against him and one of her late husband’s feoffees, claiming a right to hold Oxhey for life which they were ignoring. It appears that the matter was settled out of court since in February 1459 William and Alice agreed to refer their quarrel to arbitration.
