There can be little doubt that the MP for Wootton Bassett in the Parliament of 1447 – the first assembly to which that borough returned representatives – was a royal servant, who, a few months after the Parliament, was granted for life an office in the royal forest of Windsor.
It is, on the other hand, possible that he served again in the Household in the early years of Edward IV. He, or a namesake, was then one of the ushers of the royal chamber. As such, in August 1461 he was rewarded for riding about England on certain unspecified business, and in the following December he had further reward for delivering woollen cloth to the city of Hereford for the making of the King’s livery. He was still in office in February 1463, when he had assignment of £50 in repayment of a loan he had made to the King.
The MP’s social and geographical origins are also doubtful. Nothing in the routine will of a namesake of Pritwell (Essex), made in July 1469, identifies the testator as a former Household official; and there is no reason to identify the MP with another namesake of Irthlingborough in Northamptonshire, assessed on an income of £5 p.a. in the subsidy returns of 1436 and a tax collector in that county in 1453, nor with the contemporary surgeon of Westminster.
