A suit brought in the King’s bench in the 1440s gives Welles’s place of residence as Northiam, situated near the border of east Sussex with Kent, and describes him as a ‘gentleman’.
A lawyer by training, Welles may have been the man of this surname who held office as a filacer in the King’s bench for some 25 years. More definitely, he served as clerk to the j.p.s of Sussex for a similar period of time, beginning in 1424. His duties nurtured a personal association with Richard Wakehurst†, by far the most experienced of the justices, on whose behalf he acted as an attorney in the King’s bench in the late 1430s.
Neither the date of Welles’s removal to Burstow from his home in Sussex, or that of his death is known, although it may be speculated that he lived on a few years longer, for a Henry Welles was recorded in July 1471 as a mainpernor for John Clerk, the secondary baron of the Exchequer, who along with members of the Culpepper family was given custody of ‘Shelleys tenement’ in London. Although that Henry was described as ‘of Goudhurst in Kent’, it should be noted that two of the Culpeppers for whom sureties were offered were married to the grand-daughters and coheiresses of the MP’s former mentor, Richard Wakehurst.
