The Walwyns were an ancient family which, by the early fifteenth century, proliferated in several branches. Our MP’s father, Thomas, although not the representative of the senior line, was then its most important member. An MP for Herefordshire in four Parliaments, he held successively intimate places in the service of Roger Mortimer, earl of March (d.1398) and of William Beauchamp, Lord Abergavenny, both of whom named him among their executors. His successful career, together with the lands of his mother and wife, provided him with the resources to both make generous provision for his younger children and preserve a significant estate for his eldest son, Richard. By his will of 12 Mar. 1415 he set aside the manors of ‘Thatteley’ and ‘Farley’ (probably Fawley near Ross-on-Wye) for one of his younger sons, Makelin.
Makelin thus had a very long career, although it is only very sporadically documented. As early as October 1418 he offered surety in respect of a royal lease to the Herefordshire esquire, Thomas Parker, and by this date he was probably already embroiled in an obscure dispute among the county’s gentry. Two Leominster burgesses, Thomas Hood* and Thomas Turball, complained to the keeper of the realm, John, duke of Bedford, that, for their temerity in truthfully indicting William Croft of Croft for the murder of another gentleman, Thomas Lingen, they had become the victims of a campaign of intimidation by Croft and his adherents, among whom was Walwyn and Parker. Makelin’s interest in the affair probably arose from the fact that Croft was already (as he certainly was later to be) the husband of his sister, Margaret.
It is possible that Makelin spent some of his early career in London, perhaps receiving a legal training. That he offered surety in Chancery is suggestive, as is his appearance in person in the court of King’s bench in 1419 to file against Skydemore a plea for trespass committed in Middlesex. His appointment as escheator twice in very quick succession – in 1426 and 1428 – adds to this impression that he had some legal training, as does his occasional appearances, in person, to sue his own actions and act as surety in the central courts.
Walwyn’s status rose in the following decade. The death of his mother in 1430 brought him the lands his father had settled upon him in reversion expectant on that event, namely, lands in the parishes of Ledbury and Eastnor in the south-east of the county, including, presumably, the land at Massington in the former parish where he made his home. To this he added the temporary custody of a small estate at nearby Tarrington, granted to him in February 1430 by the Crown for the period of a minority. Two months later, he committed himself to participating in the King’s coronation expedition: on 19 Apr. he sued out letters of protection as about to depart for France in the retinue of John, Lord Tiptoft†, who, in right of his wife, Joyce Charlton, had considerable estates in the marches.
If Walwyn did travel to France, he was back in England by Easter term 1431, when he sued two yeoman of Ledbury for worrying his sheep there with dogs, and the following 16 Nov. he sat on a jury assembled at Hereford to make assessments to the parliamentary subsidy.
In the following decade Walwyn briefly returned to his earlier violent ways. In 1444 he and his servants allegedly raided property at Ledbury belonging to the Gloucestershire esquire Thomas Pauncefoot*, and assaulted one of Pauncefoot’s female servants.
For the rest of that decade, however, little is known of Walwyn, and the remainder of his long career can only be sketched in a few details. It is possible that, despite his second wife’s lands, he laboured under some financial difficulty in the mid-1450s. According to letters testimonial drawn up on 8 March 1459, four years before he had pretended a readiness to sell his manor of Massington, which seems to have been his residence, to Richard Beauchamp†, son and heir-apparent of John, Lord Beauchamp of Powick, but when the hopeful purchaser had spent £40 on the costs of the transaction Makelin had refused to complete the sale.
