The family of Vaux traced their connexion with Northamptonshire back to the reign of Henry III, but during the fourteenth century they resided at Bottisham in Cambridgeshire, acquired by marriage to the heiress of one of Edward I’s judges, Elias Beckingham. They played little part in public affairs during that century.
Unfortunately for the young William’s short-term material prospects, Joan survived until as late as 1439.
Vaux’s father was a lawyer, presumably again as a result of Thirning’s patronage, who enjoyed important connexions with, among others, Richard Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, and Reynold, Lord Grey of Ruthin. His ties with the latter were particularly close: in 1403 he was one of those licensed by the King to negotiate with Glendower concerning Grey’s ransom, and in April 1405 he was named as one of his attorneys.
From thenceforward Vaux makes regular appearances in the records. In about 1425 he was named as an executor by a local cleric, Walter Child, and, more significantly, in 1426 he was involved on the side of William, Lord Lovell, in a dispute over the manor of Quick in Saddleworth in the West Riding.
The Thirning inheritance made Vaux a man of considerable account in his own right, but, at least for the next few years, he continued to act principally in association with his kin by marriage. On 1 Aug. 1441, in company with his father-in-law, Sir Walter Lucy, and Chamber, he headed the witnesses at Castle Ashby to an important deed by which the manor there was settled in jointure on Edmund, Lord Grey of Ruthin, and his new wife, Katherine, daughter of Henry Percy, earl of Northumberland.
It was at about this date that Vaux inherited his mother’s property. She was alive as late as March 1445 when she and Chamber presented to the church of Wilby, but she appears to have been dead by 1449 when our MP had an action pending for close-breaking at the Drakelowe property of Shangton.
Vaux’s associations among the local gentry at this date are suggestive of his Lancastrian sympathies. In Hilary term 1450 he acted for his wife’s brother, Sir William Lucy, a committed Lancastrian, in an important final concord which ensured Lucy a life interest in the valuable inheritance of his childless wife, Elizabeth Percy. He was also closely associated with another wealthy landholder, Henry Green, an esquire of the royal household, for whom he acted as a feoffee.
It was at about this time that Vaux added to his estates by marriage to a Lincolnshire widow and heiress. Not only did she hold a widely dispersed estate in the county – the manors at Beelsby, Thorganby, Harlaxton and Horsington – by right of inheritance, but her late husband Pygot had granted her his manor of Doddington near Lincoln and all his other lands in fee. Since this grant broke the terms of an ancient entail her title was open to challenge, and she may have seen the well-connected Vaux as a protector against rival claimants. Their marriage had taken place by 5 Mar. 1453 when Vaux attested the Lincolnshire parliamentary election. Curiously, on the following 3 May writs of diem clausit extremum were issued in respect of his estates, and one can only speculate as to why an erroneous report of his death should have reached Chancery.
To the difficulties brought by Vaux’s new landed responsibilities were added the financial burdens placed upon him by his shrievalty. Soon after its conclusion both Richard Neville, earl of Salisbury, and Richard Merston, treasurer of the King’s chamber, complained by separate bills in the Exchequer of pleas that Vaux owed them £20 and ten marks respectively from the issues of his bailiwick. His efforts to discharge these debts were not assisted by the detention of three tallies assigned on these issues by Philip Neel of London, against whom he later won damages.
This support for the Lancastrian cause attracted the minor marks of favour to which the regime’s patronage was confined by financial restrictions. On 1 Apr. 1458, while still sheriff, Vaux sued out another general pardon and took the added precaution of securing a writ of non molestetis so that the pardon could be effectively pleaded. Later, in May 1459, the treasurer and barons of the Exchequer were ordered to allow him to account by oath for his last term as sheriff, answering only for those issues he had been able to collect.
By Vaux’s death, however, the family’s future prospects had undergone a further transformation by another windfall inheritance to add to that which had come to them through Thirning. When Vaux had married one of the two daughters of Sir Walter Lucy in the 1420s or 1430s she still had at least one brother between her and a share of the Lucy lands and her mother’s Cornish inheritance. And yet demographic fortune was to smile on the Vauxs once more. The death of Sir William Lucy on the Lancastrian side at the battle of Northampton on 10 July 1460 left our MP’s son coheir to a substantial estate, and one which later did much to justify the family’s promotion to the peerage. On the following 26 Aug., when the Yorkists were in control of government, the younger William and the other coheir, Walter Hopton, had licence to take seisin of this estate without suing livery or paying relief. Our MP’s son was benefiting here from Hopton’s service to the duke of York, and this signal mark of favour is not to be seen as marking a change in the family’s allegiance.
