The MP’s unusual surname makes it likely that he was related to Simon Vestynden, a tanner living near Ticehurst in east Sussex in the 1390s.
The post of common clerk at Hastings is poorly documented in this period, but it may be that Vestynden was so active at Brodhulls on behalf of Hastings because of continuous tenure of this office. Another of the Cinque Ports, Winchelsea, engaged him on the same basis, from May 1445, and he may have held both posts simultaneously for several years. While common clerk of one, or both, of these western Ports, and described as ‘of Hastings, gentleman’, he appeared in the Exchequer on 17 Dec. 1445 to stand surety for John Stoughton* esquire, a member of the royal household, on his appointment as an alnager of Boston in Lincolnshire. Stoughton was to represent Hastings in the Parliament summoned to Bury St. Edmunds.
Vestynden was himself elected to Parliament early in 1449. At the end of the year he took on some business on behalf of the barons of Rye regarding their Port’s agreement with its member-Port of Tenterden, for which they thanked him by entertaining him to dinner and paying him 6s. 8d. for his help. In the following summer he was offered wine when he brought a proclamation to the town.
Last recorded in May 1458, Vestynden died at an unknown date before 1475.
