The Wesenham family owed its position in landed society to Thomas’s great-grandfather, John Wesenham. An influential merchant, wool customer and financier of Edward III’s reign,
Thomas was born in the late 1380s at Bexwell in Norfolk, where his father Robert, Hugh Wesenham’s son and heir by Agnes, held property and resided before he succeeded to the manor at Conington.
Three years later, an assessment of Thomas’s property at Conington valued it at only £12 p.a.,
Never a major landowner, Wesenham owed what prominence he achieved to his membership of the Household rather than his estates. He had certainly joined the royal establishment by the reign of Henry V, during which he became a serjeant of the pantry, a position he would hold for some 30 years or more.
The first evidence of Wesenham’s involvement in public affairs at a local level relates to the controversial election of the knights of the shire for Huntingdonshire to the following Parliament. On 20 Aug. 1429, Sir Thomas Waweton* and a gang of ‘outsiders’ from Bedfordshire secured the return of Robert Stonham* and Sir Thomas’s relative, William Waweton*, who, unlike Stonham, was not then a Huntingdonshire resident. At the next county court, however, Sir Nicholas Styuecle* and 13 others, including Wesenham, challenged this election. As a result, there was a new election on 17 Sept., just five days before the Commons assembled, at which Styuecle and his ally, Roger Hunt*, were the successful candidates. What lay behind these events is debatable, but they probably arose out of worsening rivalry between John Mowbray, duke of Norfolk, and a patron of Sir Thomas Waweton, John Holand, earl of Huntingdon, despite the more recent (but unsubstantiated) suggestion that they were the result of infighting among the gentry themselves. Wesenham’s involvement in this affair was uncontroversial, since he had taken the side of the majority of the gentry of Huntingdonshire.
It was another five years before Wesenham joined his first commission in that county but in the meantime he spent much of the first half of the intervening period abroad. He was certainly not at home when he suffered a burglary at his house at Conington in July 1430,
A year later, Wesenham was sitting for the county in the Parliament of 1437. Given his modest estates and previous lack of involvement in its affairs, his Household status must have assisted him to gain election to the Commons. During the Parliament, Wesenham stood surety at Westminster for the King’s physician, the influential John Somerset*.
Wesenham’s first Parliament was the last of Henry VI’s minority and, like other royal servants, he received his share of largesse after the King assumed full control of the kingdom. In January 1438 the Crown confirmed him in the office of serjeant of the pantry, which it now bestowed on him for life, and it likewise converted his position of water-bailiff at Bristol into a grant for life a year later. A fortnight after this extension to his office at Bristol, he and two other royal servants, John St. Loe* and Richard Clevedon, received a grant of a ship from that port with its cargo, confiscated for breaking trade regulations while in Scandinavia. There followed two further grants augmenting Wesenham’s interests at Bristol: he became controller of the customs and wool subsidies there during pleasure in 1440, and surveyor of the search (for life) and chief customer of the port a year later. The last appointment in particular was a sign of the King’s trust in him. The grant, which refers to Wesenham’s ‘faithfulness, circumspection and discretion’, gave him or his deputy the superior place in the customs house, with special powers to survey the records of the other officials there. Meanwhile, in October 1440, he received a pardon covering his debts, arrears and any other shortcomings as serjeant of the pantry.
By now, as the evidence of his commissions indicates, he was more involved than hitherto in local affairs in eastern England. He had sat on the bench in Huntingdonshire since 1437, and gaol delivery rolls show that he was an active rather than a purely nominal j.p. in the early 1440s.
Within a few months of the short Parliament of 1442, Wesenham was acting as a feoffee for Margaret, widow of Richard Hille of Paddington, Middlesex.
In January the following year, Wesenham received a pardon for offences he had committed against the statute of liveries.
Some eight months before that Parliament met, Wesenham was appointed to an oyer and terminer commission directed to inquire into the abbot of Ramsey’s complaint that rioters had attacked and ransacked the priory of St. Ives, a daughter house of his monastery. Although most of the alleged rioters were husbandmen, labourers and rural craftsmen, the leader, John Plomer alias Palgrave, bailiff of Fenstanton, was of yeoman status, and his two leading associates were Robert Digby of Offord D’Arcy, esquire, a relative of Everard Digby*, and Robert Walton, a gentleman from Great Stukeley. They were said to have led some 100 men from Huntingdonshire and Cambridgeshire in an assault on the priory, most of whose inmates had then fled to the safety of Ramsey abbey. In the event, Wesenham and his fellow commissioners were unable to find Plomer, obliging the Crown to issue further commissions for his arrest in the following May.
Among the other commissioners was Robert Stonham, alongside whom Wesenham gained election as a knight of the shire for Huntingdonshire to the Parliament of 1453. As on previous occasions, Wesenham had probably relied on the backing of the Court when standing as a candidate for this Parliament, usually regarded as one of the most royalist and compliant of Henry VI’s reign. Before the end of the year, however, Henry VI suffered his first bout of incapacitating illness and in the spring of 1454 Parliament agreed that Richard, duke of York, hitherto a strong critic of the Court, should assume the role of Protector of the realm. In all likelihood, it was during York’s first protectorate that Wesenham was removed from the royal pantry. In spite of his grant of January 1438, he was not listed among its serjeants when the Council drew up ordinances for the regulation of the Household during the King’s illness in November 1454. Whatever the circumstances in which Wesenham lost office, he must have retained an association with the Court. In the spring of 1455 he received a summons to the abortive great council at Leicester,
Notwithstanding wider events, old age and infirmity rather than political considerations may explain why Wesenham, by then over 70 years of age, relinquished the office of surveyor at Bristol in October 1456 and that of water-bailiff in the same port by February 1457. Having acquired his last recorded royal pardon in February 1458,
An inquisition post mortem was held for Wesenham in January 1461 although it failed to mention that he had held a manor and advowson at Denton as well as at Conington. Notwithstanding this omission, he had not, as already observed, been a significant landowner. Perhaps he had lacked any incentive to try to enlarge his estate, for he left no surviving children; indeed, it is unclear whether he had ever married. The arrangements he had made for Conington and Denton meant that his heir, his 66-year-old brother, Robert, succeeded to an extremely paltry inheritance. The elderly Robert, a servant of the barons Roos of Helmsley, survived until 1477. His heirs were the surviving offspring of his sisters, Joan Folville and Cecily Rydhyll.
