Despite the numerous namesakes who were active in various counties during this period, it is almost certain that Umfray can be identified as a King’s servant of that name who hailed from Northamptonshire. His family came originally from Gloucestershire, but may have moved to the Midlands following the marriage of his widowed mother, Elizabeth, to Henry Garstang, who in 1446 held the manor of Barton Henred in Northamptonshire, probably in right of his wife. This manor may then have passed to Umfray on his mother’s death.
By the end of 1450, John had entered Henry VI’s household as a yeoman of the Chamber, and was receiving annual fees.
Nothing more is known of him and he was dead by August 1468, when his widow, Eleanor, was pardoned along with her second husband, Robert Fenne*, who was then styled ‘tenant ... of the lands late of John Umfray, alias Robert Fenne of Barton Seagrave’.
