This MP is to be distinguished from a more prominent namesake, the son and heir of the wealthy Sir William Waleys† of Glynde in Sussex, for that John Waleys died on 4 Oct. 1418.
By that date, like his kinsman William, John had joined the affinity of the earl of Arundel, and is recorded in association with several of the earl’s retainers, such as Jugler, William Ryman* and John Halsham.
Given the MP’s profession, it seems clear that the John Waleys who enlisted in the retinue of the earl of Arundel for Henry V’s invasion of France in 1415 was the esquire from Glynde.
Subsequently, Waleys continued to take briefs from landowners from the region, who included Sir Reynold Cobham and the executors of William Weston† of Hindhall, and he appeared for the former as well as for Countess Beatrice in the Michaelmas term of 1427, at the time that he was representing New Shoreham in the Commons.
