The identity of the man who represented Totnes in the Parliament of 1435 cannot be established with absolute certainty. No individual of this name is recorded living either at Totnes or Dartmouth in this period, and the most likely candidate appears to be John atte Wode, a minor Devon gentleman from the parish of Brixton. Wood came to prominence in the shire in about 1431 when in succession to his father he acquired a share in the Champernowne inheritance, which, following the childless death of Otto Champernowne in 1422, had been divided among the heirs of Otto’s three aunts, Margaret, Elizabeth and Joan (the last named being John Wood’s grandmother).
It seems that Wood received some training in the law, and he was periodically called upon by his neighbours to attest their property deeds or to act as their feoffee.
The date of Wood’s death is obscure, and it may have been he who attested the shire elections of 1453 and 1455, but he was certainly dead by 1460. He was succeeded by his son, another John, who attested the Devon elections of 1472, and died in 1480.
