The schedule attached to the 1447 election return for the knights of the shire for Wiltshire provides the first certain reference to Whetnals, who it lists as one of the burgesses returned for Cricklade to the Parliament of that year.
William Whetnals of the Household remained a yeoman of the cellar after November 1454, following the making of ordinances for the regulation of the royal establishment in the wake of the King’s mental collapse. Conceivably he transferred his services to the first Yorkist monarch, since in the spring of 1469 ‘William Whetnall’ and Simon Paxman, a groom of Edward IV’s household, received a payment from the Exchequer on behalf of the grooms and pages of the King’s hall. Just under two years later, a William Wettenhale of London, ‘gentleman’, stood surety at the Exchequer for Edward Hungerford† and Edward Basyng*, to whom the Crown had assigned the keeping of the Wiltshire manors of Corsham and Stratton St. Margaret.
While there is no evidence that Whetnals was associated with Cricklade before 1447, it is possible that he was the William ‘Whetenall’ of Wiltshire, ‘gentleman’, who stood surety at the Exchequer for Henry Lochard four years later.
