More may be added to the earlier biography.
During the Parliament of 1429, Waterden and his fellow MP, John Parmenter*, acquired a charter of liberties for Lynn known as ‘the Rider’ and obtained a royal commission for the repair of the town ditch.
In early 1430, while the Parliament was still sitting, Waterden’s putative brother Richard, then mayor of Lynn, died in office. He had made a will – no longer extant – in which he had appointed the MP and Philip Frank* his executors. It was in this capacity that the pair were obliged to render account at the Exchequer in Michaelmas term 1431, for goods that Richard had seized for the Crown while mayor.
In January 1432, a few months before his third Parliament opened, Waterden and two other Lynn burgesses, Thomas Botkesham* and Thomas Burgh*, agreed to submit to the judgement of the borough’s common council in a dispute between them and John Warner†.
Given Waterden’s training in the law, it is conceivable that he was the John Waterden appointed to a commission of gaol delivery at Ely, Cambridgeshire, in July 1434.
