The Widdringtons were a long-established Northumberland family who had lived at the manor from which they took their name since the twelfth century. They had a distinguished record of military and parliamentary service. From the election of the famous soldier, Sir Gerard Widdrington† (d.1362), to the Parliament of March 1336 to that of our MP’s grandfather, Sir John†, to the Parliament of 1414 (Nov.), members of the family represented the county on at least eight occasions and the borough of Newcastle-upon-Tyne at least once. Gerard was the eldest son of Sir John’s son, Roger. Although Roger did not sit in the Commons, he nevertheless played an active role in county affairs, serving as sheriff of Northumberland on as many as four occasions.
The first mention of our MP dates from 1 Oct. 1450, when he attested the parliamentary election overseen by his father, then serving his final term as sheriff. The electors returned John Ogle* and William Bertram*, both retainers of the Percys, and Gerard’s presence on this occasion may suggest an early attachment to the county’s leading magnate family.
Widdrington was still a young man when, on 1 Mar. 1453 at Newcastle-upon-Tyne, he was elected as one of the knights of the shire for Northumberland alongside John Ogle.
Little evidence survives of Widdrington’s career over the next few years. He had married by September 1454, making a good match to Elizabeth, the daughter of the Yorkshire landowner, Christopher Boynton. In that month his father’s feoffees delivered seisin of the castle, lordship and manor of Haughton in the liberty of Tynedale to the couple. On 15 Oct. 1455 Widdrington settled the manor of Plessey, as well as certain property which he had leased from the prior of Brinkburn, on feoffees, and in April 1457 he made a six-year lease to the same prior of a tenement called ‘Gerardsclose by Stokclose’. A year later he was pardoned his outlawry for his failure to answer William Latoner, a London tailor, with regard to a debt of as much as £200.
During this period Widdrington continued in the service of the Percy family. On 6 Apr. 1457 at Durham he and three other Percy servants entered into a recognizance for 1,000 marks as a guarantee that the new earl of Northumberland, who had succeeded his father in 1455, would abide by an important agreement with the King: the earl was to recoup money owed to him as warden of the east and middle marches through the export of wool at a reduced rate of customs, for which he was to make due account.
Little is known of the last years of Widdrington’s career. He died shortly before 20 Feb. 1471 when a writ of diem clausit extremum was issued in respect of his lands in Northumberland.
