Whiteheved’s origins are unknown, although he appears to have come from a family of some modest means which had interests in Carlisle.
Whiteheved may also have had connexions with greater men. It may be that he is to be identified with the namesake who had a modest salary of 6s. 8d. p.a. from Henry Bowet, archbishop of York. He may also have been connected with Ralph Neville, earl of Westmorland: in later law suits he is described as a yeoman of Bolton-in-Allerdale, where the earl was lord.
Little else is known of Whiteheved. Between 1426 and 1433 he was one of several tenants of the manor of Bolton-in-Allerdale sued for debt by Sir Peter Tilliol*. Tilliol claimed to hold the manor as the lessee of the earl of Westmorland, but his right was disputed by the earl’s younger son, Sir George Neville, as the earl’s grantee. The latter’s title was vindicated at a special assize of novel disseisin in December 1433, and it is probable that Whiteheved was sued by Tilliol as a tenant who refused, justifiably as it transpired, to pay him rent.
Further evidence of Whiteheved’s connexions with the Nevilles comes much later, and it may be that it relates to a namesake. On 12 Apr. 1452 the earl’s grandson, Robert Neville, bishop of Durham, appointed for life his servant, William Whiteheved, as parker of his park at Evenwood in the palatinate of Durham.
