A member of a prominent Essex family, Tyrell was a younger son of an influential parliamentarian and servant of the Lancastrian Crown. Most of Sir John Tyrell’s lands passed to his eldest son, Thomas, but William succeeded to a manor at Rawreth in south-east Essex, where he took up residence, and another at nearby North Benfleet, a property that his mother had brought to Sir John in marriage.
Tyrell is first heard of witnessing a conveyance in February 1441.
Tyrell’s second Parliament came to an end just as Cade’s rebellion was beginning. Several weeks into the rebellion he was suspected of involvement in it, and in July 1450 he was pardoned at the queen’s request for having taken part in an illegal gathering in Essex.
Tyrell was returned to the Commons for the last time in the wake of York’s victory at the battle of St. Albans. During the Parliament he submitted a petition claiming that his indictment of 1452 was malicious and sought the permission of the King and Lords to take legal action against those who had procured it.
After Edward IV seized the throne, the new government excluded Tyrell from the administration of Essex although by 1463 trusted his brother, Sir Thomas, sufficiently to make him a j.p. He and Sir Thomas were more fortunate than their brother, William I, who had been arrested for treason early in the previous year. Three days before the elder William’s execution on 20 Feb. 1462, Tyrell took the precaution of acquiring a royal pardon.
Following the Readeption of Henry VI in the autumn of 1470, Tyrell was restored to the bench and once again placed on ad hoc commissions. Well aware that Edward IV, then in exile in the Low Countries, would try to regain the throne, the authorities kept a close watch on East Anglia, forcing him to land in Yorkshire on his return to England in the following spring.
No inquisition post mortem for Tyrell survives, but his lengthy and detailed will, made in his ‘owne hande’, gives much detail about his lands. Apart from his manors at Rawreth, North Benfleet and Hockley, he died possessed of other holdings in south-east Essex (many of which he had purchased in piecemeal fashion from his tenants and neighbours) and Kent. His son, John, heir to Rawreth and other inherited lands, features only briefly in the will, which was largely concerned with providing for the MP’s second wife, Philippa, and his children by her. William awarded Philippa, the daughter of a Kentish Lancastrian, and the widow of an esquire from the same county, a life interest in North Benfleet, along with other lands and tenements in Essex and his holdings in Kent, including a ‘place’ in Maidstone which he had jointly purchased with James Brown and others. He also directed that their son Jasper, still a minor, should succeed to part of her dower holdings in Essex, after her death. None of Tyrell’s three daughters by Philippa was married when he made the will and he set aside the income from various properties in Hockley and Rawreth for their upbringing and that of Anne Pympe, evidently a resident of his household, and perhaps Philippa’s daughter by her previous marriage. He also arranged that Elizabeth, his eldest daughter by Philippa, should have a marriage portion of £100.
Within a few years of Tyrell’s death his widow, Philippa, whom he had appointed one of his executors, remarried. In the second half of the 1470s she and her new husband, Sir John Guildford of Kent, took action in Chancery against her co-executor, the clerk, William Howard, and others in relation to her late husband’s estate. In several bills they accused Howard of withholding money intended for the upbringing of her children by the MP, as well as deeds relating to Tyrell’s lands. Howard was again a defendant in Chancery in the mid 1480s, when Elizabeth and Anne, two of Tyrell’s daughters by his second marriage, sued him over their father’s will and estates.
