Warter was one of a group of wool merchants who dominated the government and parliamentary representation of York in the first decades of the fifteenth century. Although his family came from nearby Bugthorpe, its members had long been associated with the city. An earlier Richard Warter belonged to the governing council of York in the last years of the fourteenth century, while Thomas de Warter, a mercer, was made free of the city in 1394-5.
In February 1426 Warter was chosen as one of the chamberlains of York, beginning an involvement in the government of the city that would last over 30 years. It was in this capacity that, the day after his appointment, he witnessed his first parliamentary election.
Two months after his return from Parliament, Warter was elected mayor of York. His mayoralty was notable for the efforts made in the city to raise money for the defence of Calais, under threat from the Burgundians. On 14 Feb. and again ten days later Warter was named on commissions to raise loans of £200 and £145 from the citizens.
By contrast with his well-documented public career, little is known of Warter’s business dealings. In 1429-30, when his wife was admitted to the guild of Corpus Christi, he had still been described as a goldsmith and even by the time of his election to Parliament he did not apparently possess any great wealth: in the assessment made for the parliamentary subsidy in 1436 his property was said to be worth only £5 p.a., the lowest figure recorded among the aldermen.
Little other evidence survives of Warter’s private affairs, although his connexion with John Thirsk appears to have been a particularly close one. In November 1458 the two of them were licensed, along with the mayor, William Holbeck*, Archbishop William Booth and George Neville, then bishop-elect of Exeter, to found a guild in the city, consisting of a master and six brethren, to pray for the royal family.
Warter made his will, a long and detailed document, on 21 May 1458. He asked to be buried in his parish church of St. Saviour’s, next to his second wife. Bequests were made to and prayers requested in his birthplace of Bugthorpe, the Minster, the friaries within the city, and the priories of St. Andrew and Clementhorp, as well as several other religious houses in Yorkshire. Various hermits in and around the city, the inmates of the city’s hospitals, leper houses and prisons were also remembered. Warter ordered his executors to provide 100 gowns for poor men who were to attend his funeral (the format of which was specified precisely), and he also left five marks p.a. for a perpetual chantry to be established in his parish church. His memory was further to be perpetuated there by a red velvet altar cloth emblazoned with his arms. To ensure that this elaborate provision would not be in vain, he instructed his executors to prepare bills containing his name along with those of his two wives, his parents, brothers and sisters, so that each chaplain could refer to these when singing mass. In all, of the £755-worth of cash bequests made by Warter in his will, £469 was explicitly earmarked for easing his soul’s progress through purgatory. Even bequests to his children were hedged with provisos related to the afterlife. His daughter, Katherine, and her husband, Peter Ardern, were promised £100 provided they found a chaplain to sing in his newly-established chantry chapel in St. Saviour’s. His son, Robert, was to have £100 when he came of age (although if he died before then the money was to be left to the chantry), while £20 was left to the guild of St. Christopher for the building of a new guildhall, providing its members remembered his and his family’s souls in their prayers. Various small sums were given to named servants, while his brother-in-law, John Morton, was respited a debt of £3. The deeds and obligations relating to Warter’s business affairs were to be placed in a locked chest which was to be lodged in the vestry of the Minster and only opened in the presence of all his executors. Unusually, and probably to ensure that the specific instructions in his will were carried out without hindrance or delay, Warter named as his executors three clergymen, including the under-treasurer of the Minster and a parson there, alongside John Brereton (d.1474), a merchant. It is unclear from the local records when Warter died – he was still alive on 1 Sept. 1460 when he attested the city’s parliamentary election – and probate was not granted until March 1465.
