It is unlikely that Wilde was descended from the Goldsmiths, a family prominent in Oxford in the late 1200s, since his alias arose from his trade.
Before becoming an MP, Wilde served two consecutive terms as bailiff of Oxford. A petition complaining about the behaviour of Irish students attending Oxford university, which the Commons submitted in the Parliament of 1422, suggests that his time in the office proved a difficult one. The petition accused the Irishmen of wanton lawlessness in Oxford and elsewhere in the Thames valley and further alleged that they had menaced anyone in authority who had tried to take action against them, including the town’s bailiffs. Although the petition does not name the bailiffs, it is almost certain that Wilde, recently re-elected to that office, was one of the officials in question. According to the petition, the bailiffs had fled the borough for fear of the miscreants, meaning that they were unable to collect its fee farm or perform any of their other duties. The Commons concluded the petition by asking the King to evict all Irishmen from the realm, save for senior members of the universities, those with English benefices or an English parent, or those of good repute residing in English towns and cities. The petition was granted, although the university was afterwards permitted to admit law-abiding Irishmen who could produce ‘lettres testimoniales’ guaranteeing their good behaviour.
A few weeks after the Parliament ended, Wilde was obliged to enter a recognizance for a debt of £100 he owed the Crown. This security was taken from him in his capacity as bailiff of Oxford, suggesting that this significant sum represented arrears due from the borough, perhaps of the fee farm the lawless Irishmen had made too difficult to collect.
A little over a year before Wilde entered his final Parliament, Joan and Elizabeth, the daughters and coheirs of Sir John Drayton†, and their respective husbands, Drew Barantyn* and Christopher Preston, sued him in the court of King’s bench. The suit reached pleadings in Hilary term 1431 when the plaintiffs alleged that he and the town clerk of Oxford, Michael Norton, had forcibly broken into their house in the town. Wilde and Norton were represented in court by their attorney, William Betley, but it fell to Hugh Holgot, an attorney employed by the borough, to respond to the plaintiffs’ plea. Citing Oxford’s royal charters, Holgot claimed cognizance of the suit for the borough, on the grounds that both defendants were burgesses and the alleged offence had occurred within Oxford. The court adjourned after instructing the parties to reappear in the following quindene of Easter, but it is possible that the case was settled out of court since there is no trace of it in the plea roll for Easter 1431.
Wilde was caught up in another dispute later that decade, when he and several other Oxford men were among those chosen to collect Oxfordshire’s contribution to the subsidy granted to the King in the Parliament of 1435. Upon their appointment, made in January 1436, the borough protested that none of its inhabitants had served as tax collectors in the wider county in the past.
It appears that Wilde was not chosen for any further public office after this affair, although he remained active in the late 1430s as a surety and arbitrator for those involved in suits brought before the chancellor of Oxford university. In February 1439, he himself was party to a case heard in the chancellor’s court, at which it was ruled that he owed John Quenarton, a fellow of New College, just over 40s. The records of the court show that he freely acknowledged the debt, although not how it had arisen in the first place.
Not heard of after 1441, Wilde is likely to have died soon after making the previously mentioned conveyance to the archdeacon of Rochester and John Aston. A William Wilde, possibly his son or grandson, attested the return of Oxfordshire’s knights of the shire to the Parliament of 1472.
