Although from one of the county’s leading families, William Walwyn, as a younger son whose life was comparatively short, was the most obscure of the Herefordshire MPs in Henry VI’s reign. He owed what place he had in local affairs to the provision his father made for him in his will of 1415. Aside from a modest 20 marks in cash, he was to have lands in Butterley (in Edvin Ralph) in the north-east of the county and in Venn (in Marden), near Hereford, in fee tail, together with, after the expiry of a term of 20 years and the death of his mother, the manor of Longworth (in Lugwardine), again near Hereford. He was also given a remainder interest in other of the family properties expectant on the childless deaths of either one or both of his brothers, Richard and Makelin. These latter remainders never fell in, but in 1428 and 1431 he was returned as tenant of the family property in Butterley and Venn and, more surprisingly (the term of 20 years had not yet expired), of the manor of Longworth.
Most of William’s appearances in the records are in the company of his more important brothers. In Michaelmas term 1426 he and Makelin were among those who offered surety in the court of King’s bench for a Shropshire gentleman, William Hodenet; and in September 1427 and December 1430 he joined Richard among the attestors to the Herefordshire parliamentary elections.
Walwyn’s service in Parliament was almost the last act of a short career. On 22 July, five days after the end of the Parliament, he joined Makelin in standing surety in a grant made to the Welsh knight, Sir William ap Thomas; and he was still alive in 1434 when, as ‘of Longworth’, he was among those included in the list of Herefordshire men who were to be required to take the parliamentary oath not to maintain peace-breakers.
