Additions and corrections may be made to the previous biography.
This states that Waweton was the son of John Waweton†, but a royal pardon granted to him in Henry V’s reign and a lawsuit which he won against his kinsman William Waweton* in the early 1440s show otherwise. In the pardon, dated 12 Oct. 1415, he is referred to as ‘son and heir of Thomas Waweton esquire’,
As it is not known when Waweton’s father and namesake died, it is possible that he, rather the subject of this biography, sat in some of the earlier Parliaments listed above. Consequently, it is not clear which Thomas sued the sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire, Sir John Howard*, in the Exchequer in October 1403, for his wages as a knight of the shire for Huntingdonshire in the Parliament of the previous year. Stating that he was owed £12, this plaintiff declared that he had delivered a writ of expenses to Howard’s under sheriff, William Aleyn, at Huntingdon in late December 1402.
In March 1443, during his own last term as sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, Waweton was entrusted with the custody of a couple of bonds that Thomas* and Ralph Bole* of Bedford had entered into with John Lyttelbury and others of the same town. A few years later, Lyttelbury and his associates sued him in the common pleas for unjustly detaining these securities, but it is unlikely that he was motivated by any malicious intent since he declared himself ready to deliver the bonds to whomsoever the court directed.
During the early 1440s Waweton brought suits against a number of men for trespassing on his property in and around Great Staughton. The defendants included John Waweton, a fishmonger from London, whom he accused of having assaulted and wounded his servants there.
