The Veers had been possessed of ‘Vere’s Wotton’ in Symondsbury near Bridport in west Dorset since the thirteenth century, but Walter’s grandmother, one of eight sisters and coheirs of Nicholas Glamorgan (d.c.1362), brought to the family her property at East Standen in Arreton, on the Isle of Wight, and it was there that Walter’s father, John, chose to reside. John’s lands and rents on the island, together with his moiety of the manor of Whitwell there, provided him with an income estimated at £30 p.a. in the tax assessments of 1412, and at that date he also received annual rents of four marks from land in Devon.
Walter’s elder brother (another John) had predeceased their father, without leaving issue, so Walter inherited the lands on the Isle of Wight. Preferring, however, to live on the mainland, he took up residence across the Solent at Lyndhurst in the New Forest, and his first public office, awarded him in 1423, was that of riding-forester. He may have exceeded his brief: at an unknown date he was sent a writ directing him to desist from charging chiminage on the carts of the warden of Winchester College travelling through the forest, and to release any distraint which he may have taken on that account.
During this period of the early 1430s Veer established connexions of note among the gentry of the region. In 1430 he was enfeoffed by the prominent Sussex landowner Sir John Bohun in certain of his estates in that county, including the lordship and manor of Midhurst, and in the spring of 1432 he assisted Bohun’s son-in-law Sir Stephen Popham* in mediating between Sir John and the burgesses of Midhurst to put an end to their disputes over market tolls and the profits of the local courts.
Veer, who had interests in shipping, proved successful in a maritime cause arising out of the arrest of Le Marie of Lymington. In October 1434, however, Thomas Freeman*, the Salisbury merchant, appealed against the sentence passed by Master John Gentyll (acting as lieutenant to the admiral, John, duke of Bedford), on the grounds that Gentyll had showed Veer and his co-plaintiffs undue favour. Early in 1435 Veer was granted letters of protection for six months as about to sail for France in the company of Sir John Cressy*, only for these to be revoked in July that year because he had failed to embark and remained in London.
Over the years Veer had failed to keep his inheritance intact. The tax assessments of 1436 had judged his income in Hampshire to be only £20 p.a.,
Meanwhile, in December 1437, after Henry VI formally attained his majority, he granted Veer his office in the New Forest for life, and two years later Veer obtained at the Exchequer keeping of the priory of St. Helens on the Isle of Wight for ten years, at an annual rent of £8.
Veer apparently died without surviving issue. His holdings at Arreton, some nine messuages and 350 acres of land, passed by his gift to John Dykeman (d.1460) and his wife Alice, possibly the MP’s cousin of that name.
