The Ughtred family can be traced back to the middle of the thirteenth century, when various members were prominent in the administration of Scarborough. Much of the family’s early prosperity was based on the lands which a distinguished cleric, Robert Ughtred (d.1291), dean of York, passed to his nephew, Sir Robert Ughtred† (d.1310).
Robert’s father died shortly before 2 Dec. 1411, leaving Robert a boy of only around nine years old. Much of his early life is obscure, but an inquisition held into the alleged concealment of royal wardships on 9 Sept. 1412 found that his wardship and marriage belonged to Queen Joan, on the basis of a rent of 1d. in Thirsk held by his father from the Earl Marshal, and which Henry IV had since granted to his queen.
Robert began his documented public career in March 1430, when he was first appointed as commissioner of array in the East Riding. Described in the appointment as a knight, he had almost certainly taken up knighthood only shortly beforehand, possibly in response to the distraint proclaimed on 26 Feb. He was still being described as ‘of Kexby, esquire’ in a plea of debt brought against him and others in common pleas in Easter term 1430, but was described as a knight when the case resumed in Michaelmas term 1432.
It was also around this time that Sir Robert’s material fortunes took an unexpected upward turn. His young cousin, John Godard, had died on 23 Aug. 1430, and on 12 May 1432 the escheators of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire were ordered to arrange partition of the Godard estates. These comprised not only the lands of John’s father (Ughtred’s uncle John), but also the latter’s brother, Henry.
The new inheritance served to enhance Ughtred’s status, and this is reflected in his appointment in July 1435 to the East Riding bench. He retained that position until June 1440, when he transferred to that of the North Riding. This may possibly have reflected a move from Kexby to his North Riding manor of Coxwold, but he was generally still described as ‘of Kexby’, and continued to be appointed to other East Riding offices, particularly to the intermittent commissions of array. At the time of this change he was serving as escheator of Yorkshire, an unusual appointment for a knight, but he was soon to secure offices more appropriate to his rank.
Two terms of office as sheriff in quick succession are likely to have placed a strain on Ughtred’s finances. A series of complaints made against him in the Exchequer of pleas at the end of his second term are suggestive here. On 8 Feb. 1452, Henry Percy, Lord Poynings, keeper of the East March and son and heir of the earl of Northumberland, complained that Ughtred had refused to honour tallies worth £60 payable out of the issues of the county of Yorkshire; and lesser sums were claimed against him in the same court by the keeper of the great wardrobe, William Cotton*, and Simon Reyham.
Ughtred, for whatever reason, played a diminished role in local administration after his second shrievalty. He attested the parliamentary election of 1453, but it was not until 17 Dec. 1457 that he was again appointed to a royal commission, being among the assorted local notables ordered to assign archers in the various wapentakes of Yorkshire.
More evidence of Ughtred’s Lancastrian allegiance, either real or simply suspected, dates from 1468. On 19 Oct. 1468, at a time when plots to restore the Lancastrians were being uncovered, he saw fit to take out a general pardon, and it seems that he was at least suspected of involvement in the events surrounding the arrest shortly afterwards of a number of men including John de Vere, earl of Oxford. In a letter of the following 9 Dec. sent to Sir William Plumpton* referring to these events and the executions of various conspirators, Plumpton’s legal agent at Westminster reported that he had heard that Sir Robert Ughtred had been ‘sent for’, but opined ‘I trust to God it is not so’.
Whether Ughtred went on to support the Readeption does not appear, and he died on 9 July 1472 a year after Edward IV’s restoration.
