William was overshadowed by his elder brother, John, whose very active career in local government contrasts with his own meagre showing. As a feoffee of estates in Kent belonging to their late brother-in-law, Reynold Peckham, in 1421 he joined John in making a presentation to the rectory of Warehorne, although it was John who was the principal custodian of the inheritance of their nephew, another Reynold*, and took charge of his affairs.
Before his election to Parliament, Uvedale established important connexions. In the spring of 1430, Sir Roger Fiennes* of Herstmonceux, on the point of departure for France in the army accompanying Henry VI for his coronation, entrusted him with his goods and chattels and made him a feoffee of his Kentish manors of Burham and Cudham as well as of his bailiwick in Windsor forest.
William’s brother John made him a feoffee of Tatsfield and Woldingham in Surrey in 1438 or the following year, probably in order to facilitate a settlement on his heir when he died a year or so later.
In July 1444 Uvedale sold Littlebrook and other of his now deceased wife’s holdings to Roger Appleton, senior, the Exchequer official, for 300 marks, of which a third part was paid immediately, and in November Appleton also agreed to pay him an annuity of £20 for life. Unfortunately, very shortly after the sale the lands were flooded by the Thames, and rendered almost worthless. Accordingly, in the following January Uvedale remitted to Appleton 100 marks of the purchase price, so that £10 might be spent on flood ditches and the construction and repair of the ‘water thorough’, £14 on strengthening the river banks, and the rest applied at Appleton’s discretion for the celebration of masses and distribution of alms for the good of the souls of Uvedale and his wife, parents and friends. Furthermore, Uvedale, by reason of his many illnesses, and expecting to die in the near future, wished Appleton to be properly compensated for the loss of his livestock, so bound himself and his heirs to give him the sum of £24.
The sale of Addington had not been completed at the time of Uvedale’s death, when Leigh still owed him 200 marks. In the will he made on his deathbed on 24 Oct. 1449, he directed his executors to collect this sum and spend it in its entirety on stipends for four chaplains attached to the newly-founded college of All Souls, Oxford, who were to celebrate daily masses for his soul and that of Roger Heron, clerk, for as long as the money lasted. Uvedale asked to be buried in the parish church of St. Mary Overy in Southwark, to which he left £20 for the fabric, 20s. for the prior and 6s. 8d. to every canon. His executors, who included William Godyng* the former MP for Southwark, were instructed to arrange for 2,000 masses to be said for him in all possible haste, to spend £20 on altars and roads in the parishes near his lands, and to use the profits of the sale of the Saracen’s Head for works of piety. Uvedale generously released all his tenant-farmers from payment of three month’s rent. Since he was childless, the family manor of Titsey now reverted to his nephew Thomas, to whose sons, Reynold†, Henry* and Nicholas he left bequests of 20 marks-worth of stock at Northstead and gowns trimmed with martens’ fur. The will was proved on 4 Nov.
