A member of a large and well established Essex family, Edward was a younger brother of the influential John Tyrell, the Speaker in three of Henry VI’s Parliaments. While he succeeded to his mother’s manors at Shepreth, Malton and Meldreth in Cambridgeshire and Harrow-on-the-Hill in Middlesex,
In his early adulthood Edward was retained by Humphrey, duke of Gloucester, and he, his brothers, John and William, and their step-brother, William Haute* (the son of Sir Nicholas Haute† of Kent, Eleanor Tyrell’s second husband), mustered in Kent with other members of the duke’s retinue in July 1415, prior to crossing to France.
Early in Henry VI’s reign, Tyrell became embroiled in a quarrel with Ralph Bateman. Connected with the affairs of his mother, Eleanor, who had died in March 1422, it arose from a debt that his adversary had incurred in the late fourteenth century with Eleanor’s own mother, Elizabeth Flambard (d.1394), of whom she was executrix. The debt remained outstanding for years, and in 1421 Eleanor won a verdict against the by then elderly Bateman at law, awarding to her possession of his manor of Harlton in Cambridgeshire until she had recovered the sum in question and her legal expenses. Refusing to accept the verdict, Ralph contested it after her death, through several petitions he submitted to one or more of Henry VI’s first four Parliaments. He claimed that Eleanor and then Edward, his mother’s executor, had taken far more from Harlton than he had owed and appealed for the restoration of the manor to him. He further alleged that Edward and his brother John had ousted him from another two manors; that they had used force and threats to stymie a suit he had brought against them and to advance legal proceedings of their own; that they had exerted their influence to have him falsely indicted for various crimes; and that they had colluded with Nicholas Caldecote*, Warren Ingrith and John Tyrell’s friend Sir John Tiptoft† to bring false accusations against him, so that he was on the point of being outlawed for felony. One of the petitions indicates that Bateman had sought the help of the Regent, John, duke of Bedford, who sent letters to Parliament requesting that justice be done. Another bears the endorsement that the Lords should decide on the matter and that the parties should appear before them to hear their ruling, although what came of this directive is unknown. To complicate matters, the quarrel was entangled with another between Bateman and Nicholas Caldecote, an extremely murky affair during which the parties traded accusations of assault and murder against each other. Before Eleanor Tyrell died, Ralph had agreed, possibly under duress, to sell Harlton to Caldecote, although he sought to regain it the summer of 1422 by bringing an assize of novel disseisin against Caldecote, Edward Tyrell and others. Ultimately Bateman must have prevailed in these quarrels, since he was able to sell Harlton to the London draper, Alexander Child, who was in possession by 1428.
Amidst these controversies, Tyrell was also engaged in more positive activities. He attested the return of the knights of the shire for Essex to the Parliament of 1423, and in early 1425 he and other gentry from Essex and elsewhere underwrote a mortgage on behalf of John, Lord Fanhope, then trying to raise a ransom for his stepson, John Holand, earl of Huntingdon, a prisoner in France.
It is possible that Tyrell owed his connexion with de Vere to his association with the duke of Gloucester, since the earl’s stepfather, Nicholas Thorley, was a member of the duke’s circle.
It was during the first session of the Parliament of 1427 that Edward went to the Exchequer to collect de Vere’s fee as a royal councillor, and it is likely that he enjoyed his patron’s support when he gained election to this assembly, the first in which John Tyrell served as Speaker. With or without the earl’s backing, his status as a well established and substantial landowner ensured that he was eminently qualified to serve as a knight of the shire. He was re-elected to the Commons in 1432 and in May 1434 he was made a j.p., a position he was to hold for the rest of his life. In the following year he sat in Parliament for the last time and in November 1436 he was pricked as sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire. As sheriff he presided over the final election of John Tyrell (by then a knight) to the Commons, and during his term he obtained a royal pardon,
The shrievalty was Edward’s last office of any importance, although he attested the election of his nephew, Thomas Tyrell, as a knight of the shire for Essex in January 1442 and was appointed to his final ad hoc commission in the following March. By then in the last year of his life, a few months later he helped to found a chantry in the parish church at Danbury for the benefit of the late Sir Gerard Braybrooke† and the souls of himself and his co-founders.
