Hailing originally from Lamberhurst in Sussex, the Wallers had moved east across the Kentish border in the fourteenth century, when Thomas Waller purchased the manor of Groombridge from William Clinton. It was, however, Richard Waller’s synonymous father whose service to the house of Lancaster brought the family to prominence. The elder Richard distinguished himself at the battle of Agincourt and was believed to have been responsible for the capture of the duke of Orléans, a feat commemorated in the family’s armorial achievement by the suspension of a shield of the duke’s arms from its canting helm crest of a walnut tree, and by the motto ‘Hic fructus virtutis’.
Conversely, nothing is heard of the younger Richard Waller prior to his return for Bishop Waynflete’s borough of Hindon in February 1453, the circumstances of which are obscure. The insertion of his name into the election indenture over an erasure may indicate a late alteration of the return,
As a result of the latter appointment, by the summer of 1466 Waller found himself in dispute with (Sir) John Lisle II* and Isabel, his wife, over an annuity of 40 marks from Milton granted to Isabel by Edward IV,
