The earlier biography requires some modification.
In May 1413 a John Wood was appointed clerk of the estreats at the Exchequer, a position he held until 1430,
During his long career, Wood received at least two royal pardons. The first was granted to him in his capacity as the executor of his former associate, Henry Wybbe, on 3 July 1415.
It was in association with his first wife, Alice, that Wood reached an agreement with the Dominicans at Worcester. In the early 1420s that house gave the couple licence to construct a door in the wall of the priory’s garden, so that they might have access to its church.
In August 1430 Wood was associated with Stephen Payn* of Horsham and John Throckmorton I* in receiving a release of land in Sussex. This transaction was probably made on behalf of Sir Hugh Cokesey* who held property in the locality and had long employed both Throckmorton and Wood in the administration of his estates.
Following the death of Bishop Polton of Worcester in 1433, Wood was well qualified to become a guardian of the temporalities of that diocese, since the bishop had employed him as both steward and receiver. Polton had granted him a fee of £20 p.a. as steward of the episcopal estates on 1 Nov. 1426, presumably the date Wood had taken up the office, and at some stage in the period July 1427-8, Wood had attended a meeting of the guild of the Holy Cross at Warwickshire town of Stratford-on-Avon (of which the bishops of Worcester were feudal lords) in his capacity as Polton’s receiver. In addition, in 1431 Polton had appointed him and his son Thomas as joint bailiffs of his liberty of Oswaldslow hundred, an office they were to hold in survivorship.
By 1443 Wood had fallen out with John Archer of Statfold, Staffordshire, for on 1 July that year he agreed to submit their differences to arbitration. They had quarrelled over Wood’s ward and son-in-law, Thomas Gower, presumably because Archer had made a bid to secure Gower’s wardship for himself.
In mid 1446 the Crown pardoned Wood all fines, amercements and other demands predating September 1441. It is not clear how these claims had arisen, although it is possible they related to his time as one of the guardians of the see of Worcester.
Later in the same decade, Wood contracted a match for one of his offspring with a child of Thomas Middleton*, an esquire who held estates near Stratford-on-Avon in the right of his wife. The marriage features in an account of the Stratford guild of the Holy Cross. The account, for the year July 1448-9, neither records the exact date of the ceremony nor the names of the couple, so it is not known whether Wood’s child was a son or daughter. It does however show that the marriage took place at nearby Walton, where Middleton held a couple of manors and to where the guild’s brethren sent a gift of money to mark the occasion. The account also records that Wood afterwards rode from Walton to Stratford, where the brethren treated him to wine.
In all likelihood, William Wood II*, who sat for Worcester in the Parliament of 1449, was one of the MP’s children. As his will of 1458 reveals, Wood fathered two younger sons named William by each of his first two wives, and it is worth noting that this putative son secured his seat at the only election for the city that the MP is known to have attested.
