Very little is known of Richard Vernon, for although he was the heir apparent to one of the greatest gentry estates in the Midlands he did not live long enough to make a significant impact on local affairs. He may have been brought up in the household of his cousin, Edmund Stafford, bishop of Exeter. This, at least, is one explanation of the grant to him by the bishop of the manor of Bridgeford in Staffordshire. Since the bishop died in 1419, this grant must have been made when Richard was a mere boy. Later he was assumed to have had an interest in Stafford’s property at Clifton Campville near his father’s manor of Harlaston, for on 6 Nov. 1427 he quitclaimed his right there to the late bishop’s feoffees.
In the same year Vernon’s father contracted a very favourable marriage for him: as the daughter of the only peerage family with its principal residence in Derbyshire, Elizabeth Grey was a more than suitable match. No direct evidence survives of the terms of the marriage settlement but she is likely to have brought a large portion: her sister Lucy was bequeathed one of 500 marks in their father’s will (now lost) and there is no reason to suppose that she was not treated equally well.
Vernon was yet a minor at this date. Like other members of his family he may have spent some time fighting in France, perhaps serving in the garrison at Caen in the late 1420s.
