Wardale first appears in the records in 1414 when, in company with John Dryng, he paid 6s. 8d. in tithes to the church of St. Mary in Scarborough. Another Wardale, William, also appears in the tithe accounts of that year and continued to do so until 1417, and it may be that he was our MP’s father.
Wardale’s commercial interests were supplemented by landed ones. In 1442 he sued a yeoman and six husbandmen for breaking his close at Falsgrave, just outside the town. Earlier he had himself been a defendant in respect of property there. While an MP in the Parliament of 1426 he had been sued, in company with John Acclom*, also then sitting for Scarborough, by three local gentry, headed by Sir John Salvin. The offence was an apparently significant one in that the two MPs were accused of taking goods worth as much as £30 and depasturing grass worth £10, but there is no other evidence to give it context.
Wardale’s lengthy and interesting will, made on 12 July 1457, adds to these modest details.
Less conventional than these charitable bequests were the provisions Wardale made for his property. His son, Thomas, was already established in his own right, pursuing his fishing and trading interests from the late 1430s, and he was to have only a life annuity of 40s.
