The Vauxs of Triermain in the parish of Lanercost, on Cumberland’s border with Northumberland, were descended from Hubert Vaux, who had been granted the barony of Gilsland by Henry II in 1158. The barony passed in the female line to the Multons and then, in 1315, to the Dacres, but the male descent of the Vauxs was perpetuated through an illegitimate line. In 1212 Hubert’s son, Ranulph, had granted the manor of Triermain to his bastard son, Roland, the progenitor of our MP.
Vaux was of age by 1434 when sworn to the peace in Cumberland; and in the subsidy returns of the following year he was assessed on a modest annual income of ten marks.
The pace of Vaux’s activities increased in the 1440s. In addition to appointments as escheator and commissioner of array, he sat as a gaol delivery juror on three occasions at Carlisle, the site of another of his outlying properties.
On 14 July 1453, during the second prorogation of his Parliament, Vaux was was described as an esquire resident at the Neville stronghold of Middleham when he offered mainprise in a royal grant to a fellow MP, John Archer II*. More significantly, when the earl of Salisbury became chancellor in the following April, Vaux and the other Cumberland MP, Skelton, were among his clients admitted to the customary privilege of prosecuting their debtors in the court of Chancery.
Little is known of Vaux in the later 1450s. On 25 Feb. 1457 he secured, in the name of himself and his wife, Joan, a papal indult to have a portable altar. Similar licences were given on the same day to others connected with the Nevilles, including John Tunstall*, and it may be that the Nevilles had petitioned the Pope on their behalf. There is, however, no firm evidence that Vaux repaid the favour by taking up arms for them in the civil war of 1459-61. Although, on 5 Apr. 1460, while the Lancastrians were in control after Ludford Bridge, he sued out a general pardon, giving the Neville stronghold of Penrith as a former address, there is no reason to infer from this that he had fought at Ludford.
Nevertheless, although trusted by the Yorkist government, Vaux did not rank alongside his former ward and son-in-law, Richard Salkeld, in local importance under the new dispensation. Indeed, he cuts a rather obscure figure in the last years of his career. Although in 1466 he was again named as sheriff, he took the office with the greatest reluctance and failed to serve out his full term.
Little can be discovered about Vaux’s associations with other Cumberland gentry. In the early 1460 he was acting as one of the administrators of another Neville servant, Thomas de la More (d.1459), one of whose daughters and coheirs married his kinsman, William Vaux of Catterlen.
