In the absence of a John Welweton more closely linked with the impoverished Dorset borough of Lyme Regis, it is safe to assume that the MP was the man of this name who achieved some prominence in the neighbouring county of Somerset. The family may have originally lived at Welweton or Welton in the parish of Midsomer Norton, and John’s mother came from Moreton, not far away. A namesake of John’s was active in the county in the closing years of the fourteenth century, and attended the baptism of Lord Saint Maur’s nephew at Beckington in 1408. He was still living in 1431.
Indeed, before his election to Parliament the glimpses afforded of Welweton in the records fail to present a coherent picture. When, in 1424, he was being sued for debt in the common pleas by the abbot of Glastonbury, he was described as ‘of Chilcompton, gentleman’; but another suit linked him with property at Sherborne in Dorset, and with the Dorset j.p. Walter Biere†.
After his parliamentary service was over, Welweton continued to serve occasionally as a juror, doing so, for example, at the post mortem of Sir John Luttrell, held at Taunton on 9 Oct. 1430.
Little is recorded about Welweton’s personal affairs, save that in April 1449 he made a quitclaim of a meadow known as ‘Goldemede’ and other land in Moreton which had once belonged to his great-grandparents to William Venour esquire and William Tailor, and later that same year he and his wife conveyed to Venour more property in the same place.
