The Weltdens belonged to a long-established gentry family which had been involved in the affairs of Newcastle-upon-Tyne since at least the late fourteenth century. The precise identification of the MP and the reconstruction of his career poses some difficulties, but he was almost certainly the son of another Richard Weltden and thus a nephew of Simon Weltden*, who had sat for Newcastle in 1426, and first cousin of Thomas Weltden*, who represented Northumberland in the Parliament of 1460.
By this date it is difficult entirely to disentangle the MP’s career from that of his putative son, who was also a lawyer. It is possible that it was the younger man who was active in Westminster in the mid 1440s (perhaps because he was then studying at one of the inns of court), receiving assignments at the Exchequer on behalf of the earl of Salisbury, William Neville, Lord Fauconberg, Sir Ralph Gray and Sir Robert Ogle II*, as well as Henry Percy, earl of Northumberland.
Weltden’s residence in Newcastle explains his election on 30 Sept. 1450 to represent the borough in Parliament, an election attested either by his putative father (the MP is styled ‘junior’ in the return) or else by the MP himself. On the following 21 Nov., two weeks after this Parliament assembled, he sued out a writ of dedimus potestatem to receive the oath of his cousin, Thomas, as controller of customs in the port of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and on 22 Dec., four days after the end of the first parliamentary session, he was himself granted the local office of tronager and pesager.
Weltden continued to be active in Newcastle throughout the remainder of the decade, and in March 1453 he was appointed as one of the collectors of customs there.
The later part of Weltden’s career was to be dominated by a long dispute over the property of his wife, Elizabeth, the daughter and heiress of William Southcotes of Southwark and widow of the Suffolk landowner, Richard Langham. This marriage, made at some date before the spring of 1454, was a potentially lucrative one for Weltden, for in addition to her Langham jointure and dower lands in Essex and Suffolk Elizabeth had a claim, as the heiress of her grandfather, John Oliver, to a valuable property in the parish of St. Olave’s, Southwark.
Weltden was here taking advantage of his connexion with the Nevilles, then in the political ascendant after the Yorkist victory at the battle of Northampton in July 1460. Indeed, the chancellor who gave this verdict in his favour was the earl of Salisbury’s brother, George Neville, bishop of Exeter. After Salisbury’s death at Wakefield in the following December, Weltden further strengthened his position in the dispute by entering the service of the bishop himself and presenting further petitions against Fastolf’s executors and feoffees.
Whatever the legal rights of this case, the victories Weltden achieved in Neville’s Chancery in 1460 and 1462 can be seen, in part, as reward for his long service to the Nevilles. Yet, beyond the grant of the corrody mentioned below, it was to be the only benefit he received from the change of regime. Curiously, he was not restored to the quorum of the peace in Northumberland, and one can only speculate on the reasons for his near exclusion from local government in the 1460s. Further, the apparent vindication of his wife’s rights in the Southwark property was quickly and effectively challenged. On 21 Nov. 1466 he joined Richard George†, one of the King’s serjeants-at-arms, in entering a recognizance to Fastolf’s executors, Sir William Yelverton* and Thomas Howes, clerk, to abide the arbitration of Richard Quatermayns*, Hugh atte Fenne*, Thomas Ripplingham and Roger Townshend† in a dispute over a part of the Southwark property.
Clearly the executors were not ready to accept defeat, and it is tempting to link Weltden’s second election to represent Newcastle-upon-Tyne with this attempt to bring the dispute to a conclusion. On 15 Apr. 1467 he was returned alongside the royal servant, John Wood†. It is uncertain whether the return of two men from outside the town’s governing elite was unusual at this date, as no other election indentures survive from the 1460s, but it probably was.
Weltden survived into the late 1470s. The last reference to him comes in a Chancery petition presented to Bishop Rotherham of Lincoln soon after June 1476. Augustine, abbot of Thame in Oxfordshire, complained of Weltden’s conduct in respect of a corrody worth £4 p.a. granted to him by Edward IV. He claimed that his house had refused to allow Weltden to take up the corrody until its then incumbent, John Hardwick, had surrendered his letters of appointment. This reasonable stipulation had occasioned ‘grete displeasur’ to Weltden’s master, George Neville, archbishop of York, and, fearing his indignation, the monks had allowed Weltden to enjoy the grant provided he indemnify the abbey against Hardwick and his heirs. But, when Hardwick’s executors sued the abbey for £18 as the corrody’s value over four-and-a-half years, Weltden had refused to pay the debt as he had promised.
The precise date of Weltden’s death is not recorded, but it occurred before Hilary term 1477 when his widow was the plaintiff in a minor plea of debt in Suffolk.
