As his alias indicates, Urry was a skinner by trade.
Urry made a good marriage in as much as his father-in-law, William Newman, was a ‘gentleman’ as well as a brewer. Newman leased a tenement opposite the east gate of Oxford castle from the monks of Osney abbey, a property converted into a brewery in the early 1450s. Urry’s wife Isabel possessed a contingent interest in the lease, which her father had obtained in October 1447, since the abbey had assigned the tenement to Newman and his wife and then to each of their children respectively, for their lives in survivorship. In all probability, it never came into her hands, since her three brothers took precedence over her in this arrangement.
First heard of in the spring of 1435, Urry appeared in the court held by the chancellor of Oxford university on 23 May that year, to nominate Master Thomas Graunt and Roger Helyot of Oriel College as his sureties. These guarantors undertook he would not attempt to transfer a lawsuit between him and John Willyamys, a servant of the university, elsewhere, so acknowledging the chancellor’s right to hear all pleas at Oxford involving members or employees of the university. On the same day, the court also convicted Urry of having borne arms within the university’s precincts, and of refusing to surrender those weapons to its authorities.
The first office of any importance held by Urry at Oxford was that of chamberlain. A year after completing his term as such, his fellow burgesses elected him one of the town’s bailiffs but he never advanced further up the municipal hierarchy. Shortly after completing his term as bailiff, he entered the Parliament of November 1449, in which he sat alongside his father-in-law. Although the town’s returns for two previous Parliaments, those of 1439 and 1445, have not survived, it is likely that he and Newman were newcomers to the Commons. The assembly was one of the most politically charged of the reign, but for the mayor and burgesses of Oxford a petition the town submitted to it was probably their primary concern at this time. By means of the petition, the townsmen sought an exemption from a statute of 1406 restricting apprenticeships to children of 20s. freeholders. They claimed that the statute had resulted in a shortage of tradesmen in the town, which in turn was causing members of the university to leave for lack of anyone to serve them, to the obvious detriment of the local economy. After the petition went to the Lords, the King replied that he would consider the matter. This was not the first occasion that the burgesses had sought such an exemption, and evidently they were again unsuccessful since they were to submit a similar petition in 1455.
The fate of the petition notwithstanding, Urry’s time in Parliament marked the zenith of his public career. In common with other former bailiffs of Oxford, he went on to serve as a surveyor of nuisances in the town, but by the mid 1460s he occupied the lowly post of mayor’s serjeant or mace-bearer. As a result, he earned another alias, that of ‘Oliver Seriawnte’. One authority, on the basis that he is likely to have received a salary as mayor’s serjeant, suggests that he had accepted the office after failing in business and running into financial difficulties.
