Warton, one of the few men of any significance to represent Leominster during the reign of Henry VI, hailed from a minor gentry family from Wharton, in the immediate neighbourhood of that borough. Something of his family circumstances is revealed in legal actions of 1422 and 1436. On 9 Mar. 1422, before the assize justices at Hereford, he was a defendant, alongside Agnes, widow of William Warton, another William Warton and others, in an assize of novel disseisin sued by Roger Morris and Margaret Piriton, his wife, for property in Leominster, Stoke and Eaton; in Easter term 1436 he was sole defendant when Joan, widow of the younger William Warton, claimed dower in a messuage, 120 acres of land, 26 acres of meadow, 10 acres of pasture, eight acres of wood and 19s. 6d. of rent in Wharton, Newton, Eton Gamage, Ivington and Leominster.
As a younger son Hugh had his own way to make in the world, and by Henry V’s death he had found a place in the royal household, among the ranks of the yeomen of the Crown. To whose patronage he owed this advancement is unknown, although it is possible that he was related to John Warton, a yeoman of Henry IV’s buttery.
On 2 Mar. 1430, a week after the end of his second Parliament, Warton was one of 134 yeomen of the royal household retained to go with the young King to France, each taking wages of 45s. 6d., that is 6d. a day, for their first quarter’s service, and the same sum, payable on 1 May, for the second quarter. He probably remained continuously in the royal entourage until the King returned to England late in January 1432. This is implied by a later financial account which shows that he was owed 46s. 8d. for three periods of service, namely, March to May, August to October 1431 and January 1432, and there is no reason to suppose he returned in the interim.
Once home Warton lost little time in resuming his parliamentary career. On 25 Apr. 1432 he was elected for Leominster in company with the most important townsman, Richard Winnesley*; and he was returned again on 16 Sept. 1435. In the meantime, he had been one of the Herefordshire men who took the oath of 1434 not to maintain peace-breakers.
