The MP was probably a kinsman of another Robert Waskham of Portsmouth, a smith whose smithy, lodge, stable and shop were situated within the grounds of the royal castle there. He failed to pay into the Exchequer the sum of 7s. 8d. due from him (presumably as rent) in the period from Michaelmas 1429 to 18 June 1430, but 46 years elapsed before Anne Waskham and William Gourney, as administrators of the smith’s goods, settled the long overdue account. When the smith had died is not recorded, nor Anne’s relationship to him.
The MP himself had an altogether different career, as a clerk in Chancery. In May 1443 he was named as an attorney to deliver seisin of land in West Meon, Hampshire, to Thomas Kirkby, one of the masters in Chancery and at that time clerk of the Parliaments, which suggests that Waskham’s employment among Kirkby’s subordinates had already begun. The connexion between them may well have been formed in the locality, for Kirkby was the warden of God’s House in Portsmouth.
During his years at the Chancery, Waskham was sometimes styled ‘gentleman’, which indicates that he never entered religious orders. He probably usually lived in the capital, and was called ‘of London’ in February 1453 when the widow of John Willesden granted him and others in trust all the timber from her woodland in Middlesex, along with her crops and utensils, as security for payment of the debt which her late husband owed to John Gloucester II* (the clerk of the pipe at the Exchequer).
Waskham would seem to have retained links with the Chancery as late as the chancellorship of George Neville, bishop of Exeter, which began in July 1460. Together with another Chancery clerk, Thomas Bayen*, he provided pledges in support of petitions sent to Neville by William Shillingford, the son and heir of the late John Shillingford* of Exeter.
