More may be added to the earlier biography.
It seems likely that William Walkeden was the same person as William Walkelyn, a burgess of Melcombe Regis who defaulted on attending the borough court at Michaelmas 1397. Not long afterwards he came to physical blows in a quarrel with another townsman, William Helier†, allegedly wielding a stone while his opponent used a club. Eustace Kymer†, another sometime MP for Melcombe, supported Walkelyn in the fracas. The latter was probably a kinsman of Robert Walkelyn, who earlier in the same year had agreed to erect a mill-house in the town.
Yet even if Walkeden began his career at Melcombe, and was well known to the burgesses, it is still possible that he owed his elections to Parliament to his association with the prominent Somerset lawyer John Stourton I*. In 1414 he was party to a transaction whereby Stourton acquired land at Pendomer, and he assisted him further two years later in making a settlement of the Dorset manor of Thornton.
As Walkeleyn, our MP served in the 1420s as a juror at inquisitions post mortem held in Dorset for Robert Derby, John Lisle I* and Sir Richard Arundell.
