As the first-born son of the wealthy Thomas Uvedale, Henry was the heir apparent of the substantial family estates in Hampshire and Surrey. Furthermore, as the son of Thomas’s first wife, he was also heir to his mother’s inheritance – the Foxley manors of Westington in Ayot St. Peter (Hertfordshire), Rumboldswyke in Sussex, and Bramshill in Hampshire, which his father held ‘by the courtesy’ after her death, which probably occurred in the late 1440s. At an unrecorded date Thomas arranged for Henry to share possession of Westington with him, and accordingly Henry occasionally took up residence there. Yet most of the time he appears to have lived in Hampshire.
The date of his parents’ marriage is uncertain, and nor is it known when he was born. Nevertheless, it seems likely that Henry was still under age when, on 6 Feb. 1447, he accompanied his father and uncle William Uvedale II* to the county court at Winchester to attest the shire elections to the Parliament summoned to Bury St. Edmunds. Two years later his great-uncle, William I*, who was childless, left him a scarlet robe trimmed with fur in his will. Round about the same time he was taken up by William Waynflete, the bishop of Winchester with whom his father enjoyed amicable relations. It was to Waynflete that Henry owed his marriage to a minor heiress. On 28 Nov. 1451, in return for his past services and those he would render in the future, Waynflete granted this ‘dear and faithful esquire’ the wardship and marriage of Margery Pershut, so that he could marry her as soon as she reached lawful age. Henry thereby came into possession of property at Kilmeston, not far from the bishop’s manor of Marwell – some five miles from Winchester.
Henry is not known to have had any personal interests in Portsmouth, the borough which twice returned him to Parliament, but his mother’s manor in Sussex was fairly close, as were both the family seat at Wickham and his uncle William’s home at Titchfield, and undoubtedly his father’s influence in the county and his own connexion with Bishop Waynflete would have counted for much with the electors. In the 1440s Henry’s father had been a frequent visitor to Portsmouth to take musters of armed forces sailing to France, and while Henry’s first Parliament, that of 1453, was still in being, Thomas was appointed keeper of Portchester castle.
Henry’s employment by the Crown began in the autumn of 1457 with his appointment along with other members of his family as a commissioner of array. It seems that, in unexplained circumstances, he was subsequently taken prisoner by the French – perhaps while fending off an opportunistic engagement in the Channel – for in the following February letters of protection were granted to the master and crew of the Marie of Spain, trading to England to obtain his ransom.
After the accession of Edward IV Henry is rarely recorded save in the context of local affairs. His activities remained focused on Winchester. Thus, along with three other members of his family he was present at proceedings in 1462 when the prior of St. Swithun’s successfully refuted a claim to the manor of Winnall. His close association with Waynflete continued: in March 1463 the bishop commissioned him to sequestrate the possessions of a rector from the diocese, and in November following he committed to him the administration of the goods of the late warden of the hospital of St. Cross.
While their father yet lived, Henry died on 11 Oct. 1469, and Reynold just a few months later. Apparently neither left surviving issue.
