In the late fifteenth century the Welbys, an ancient family, were described as ‘the chief inhabitants of Moulton … of very honourable standing, whom the local people were not accustomed to oppose’.
Together with his standing as heir to a valuable estate, the younger Richard enjoyed the additional advantage of being a lawyer. He is described as ‘of Grayes Inn’ in a Chancery petition of the late 1450s, by which time he was a senior member of that Inn. In 1456 he was one of a group of its seniors, headed by Thomas Bryan, a future c.j.c.p., to whom Reynold Grey, Lord Grey of Wilton, conveyed the Inn, sited on his manor of Portpole in Holborn.
Welby’s standing as a lawyer, together with his father’s virtual retirement, explains why he took a significant part in the affairs of his native county before he had come into his patrimony. Aside from his place on the bench and on occasional ad hoc commissions, he represented the county in Parliament, returned in company with John Newport II* on 5 Oct. 1450.
Yet while little can be said of what appears to have been a fairly colourless career, Welby’s will is unusually interesting. Drawn up on 2 and 12 Aug. 1465 it reveals a testator of more than ordinary piety.
The Welbys were closely attached to two important institutions, the university of Cambridge and the abbey of Croyland. The latter lay only a few miles south of Moulton: in the late 1440s our MP acted as an arbiter in the abbey’s boundary dispute with the abbey of Peterborough, with which he was also connected; and from 1463 he was the abbey’s steward of Baston and Langtoft in Kesteven, an office his son was also to hold.
Welby’s eldest son, Richard, described by the Tudor antiquarian, John Leland, as ‘of great porte and pour’ in the parts of Holland, represented Lincolnshire in the Parliament of 1472 and enjoyed a more active career than his father.
