The various Tylerds found in the south-west in Henry VI’s reign are not easy to disentangle. In about 1440 William Tylerd and his wife Emma held property in the area to the south-west of Exeter,
The man who represented the south-western cathedral city in Parliament was probably the baker of this name, who was admitted to the freedom of Exeter in September 1443, his fine being pardoned by the mayor and community.
Nothing is known of Tylerd’s activities in the Commons, but he seems to have discharged his duties to the citizens’ satisfaction, for he was re-elected three years later, in January 1449, on this occasion receiving 26s. 8d. for his expenses in a far shorter Parliament of just over 16 weeks.
There were, however, also occasional disagreements between Tylerd and his neighbours. In 1455 the council sought the advice of the prominent lawyers William Boef* and John More over various sacks of grain belonging to Tylerd which had been seized because he had sought to have the grain ground at his own mill at Exwick.
Little is known of Tylerd’s private affairs. In February 1453 he joined the ranks of the trustees of the Pytman chantry in the Exeter parish church of St. Mary Major,
At Michaelmas 1461 Tylerd was not re-elected to the council of 24. It seems probable that this owed more to his unwillingness to serve any longer than to any political disgrace, for he continued to attend the mayoral elections, at which his presence was regularly recorded throughout the 1460s. Perhaps on account of his experience, he returned to the ranks of the council in 1470-1, but does not appear to have served for more than a year thereafter.
