Nothing is now known about Worsop’s family background, although it may be speculated that he was related to a namesake, a ‘painter’ living in London in the 1420s and 1430s. That older John Worsop had perhaps been apprenticed to Thomas Wright, whom he served as an executor. Together with Wright’s widow he received sums of money from William, Lord Botreaux, in part payment of the 468 marks Botreaux owed to the deceased. In 1429 the painter stood surety for a haberdasher called William Wodeward, committed the guardianship of the sons of a girdler; he had business dealings in 1435 with a ‘coffer-maker’, and he served on a jury in 1439 in a plea brought before the civic authorities by members of the Goldsmiths’ Company.
The MP’s career took a rather different path, which it is possible to chart from his admission as a member of the Drapers’ Company at some point before the autumn of 1441. Even so, the extent of his developing trading concerns is only sketchily documented, and many years passed before he held a major office in the Company. Worsop was often a recipient of ‘gifts’ of goods and chattels, transactions closely associated with business dealings and frequently used as security for merchandise which was bought on credit. This suggests that he was active as a wholesale supplier of goods, in particular to customers who were mercers.
How far Worsop became engaged in overseas trade remains unclear, especially as his successive offices as controller and collector of customs in the port of London in the last seven years of Henry VI’s reign meant that he was barred by statute from trading there on his own account. Nevertheless, during his time as controller he was associated with John Wood III*, the under treasurer of England, and two members of the royal household in a scheme to export wool belonging to the Crown to sell abroad at the King’s profit. On 17 Apr. 1454, the very day that he left office, the Council approved the grant of a pardon to the four men of all the money received by them for the sale of this wool and a waiver of their accounts, while remitting the consequences of any trespasses they had committed in shipping it. One outcome of their activities was that after the Yorkist victory at St. Albans in the following year the Commons petitioned Parliament to protest about evasion of the staple at Calais by the shipment of 1,226 sacks of wool marked with a crown, alleging that Wood had embezzled the greater part of the customs due, amounting to some £3,000.
From the early 1450s Worsop’s activities in trade and as a financier led to his handling very substantial sums of money, and to involvement in the affairs of members of the nobility – an involvement which he later had cause to regret. Thus, he made a serious miscalculation in his financial dealings with James Butler, earl of Wiltshire, whom he had to sue in the mayor’s court in London for the large sum of £406, which he had either loaned to the earl, or else expected as payment for draper’s goods supplied to his wardrobe. After the earl had defaulted four times, Worsop took the opportunity of the Yorkist triumph at St. Albans and the removal of his debtor from the treasurership of England, to pursue him further. On 13 June 1455 he came into the chamber of the Guildhall of London to claim the silver plate and other valuables that the earl had pledged as surety for repayment. Though worth less than the sum owed him, these items were formally valued at £328 15s. 3d., and included besides basins, pots, dishes, cups and silver candelabra, a gold standing cup (worth £25), another gold cup with a sapphire set in its cover (worth £46), and, most important of all, a monstrance weighing a hefty 94 lb. and valued at as much as £166 8s. 6d.
In the closing years of Henry VI’s reign Worsop was summoned to appear before the barons of the Exchequer to answer accusations about his illicet trade in wool and cloth. In Hilary term 1458 it was alleged that he had shipped 220 sacks of wool worth £140 directly to Zeeland, evading the staple at Calais. He promptly appeared before the barons to show them a royal pardon. But a more serious charge followed in Trinity term, when he was accused of breaching the statutes by trading in cloth to the value of 100 marks during his time as controller of tunnage and poundage, between October 1456 and Easter 1458. Worsop protested that he had sold the goods in question (300 lengths of cloth) to the earl of Wiltshire before his appointment as controller, but the Exchequer process against him continued until a new King was on the throne and Worsop had secured a pardon from him.
Worsop’s motives in seeking election to the Parliament of 1460 are difficult to guess, but he must have been eager to have a seat in the Commons, for he looked outside the capital for a constituency willing to return him. He had been removed from his office as customs controller on 1 Aug., in the wake of the Lancastrian defeat at the battle of Northampton, and he may have hoped to recover it. There is nothing to indicate that he actively supported the new Yorkist regime, either at this time or later, and yet the borough which elected him, Horsham in Sussex, belonged to John Mowbray, duke of Norfolk, who was one of York’s allies, and it is worth noting that the other MP chosen, John Harowe* (who like Worsop was a Londoner), was to meet his death fighting for York at the battle of Wakefield. It is undoubtedly significant that on 3 Oct. (just four days before the Commons assembled), Worsop placed some of his property in the hands of two men: one, his former apprentice John Ashwell, was an obvious choice as someone acting in his interests, but the other was John Stodeley*, the London scrivener who had long been in the duke of Norfolk’s service and was destined to represent another Mowbray borough in the forthcoming Parliament.
Worsop was appointed neither to office nor ad hoc commissions of royal administration under the new regime, which suggests that he had done nothing while the Commons were in session to forge useful links with the Yorkists, and his record of service to the Lancastrian monarch was held against him. Nevertheless, he was granted a pardon on 11 Feb. 1462, which protected him from further prosecution for trespasses committed while controller of customs.
During the 1450s and 1460s Worsop’s financial affairs, and perhaps also his political stance, were not only affected by his close dealings with the earl of Wiltshire, but also by his involvement in those of Butler’s fellow Lancastrian Henry Percy, Lord Poynings and earl of Northumberland, who was killed at Towton. It seems clear, too, that his connexion with the latter was also a significant factor in securing his election to Parliament for Horsham in 1460. The connecting link was forged by the clever lawyer Thomas Hoo II*, an important figure in Horsham who was not only a councillor to the borough’s lord, the duke of Norfolk, but also Percy’s principal agent in southern England. Worsop collected assignments at the Exchequer on Percy’s behalf in 1448 and 1459,
The size of his loan to Edward IV, and of the sums owing to him by Hoo and the earl of Northumberland provide a measure of Worsop’s wealth. Another is his investments in property. Initially, his holdings appear to have been contained within the walls of the city of London, and concentrated in Cripplegate ward where in the 1440s he possessed a garden off Coleman Street and unspecified lands and tenements in the parishes of St. Stephen and St. Alphage. He also owned a building in Cheapside, known as ‘The King’s Head’, which he leased to Canterbury cathedral priory.
Much further away, in Dorset, Worsop acquired an estate consisting of the manor of Bradpole, the hundred of Redhone and Beaminster Forum and some 40 messuages and 260 acres of land. The estate had belonged to the Russell family and since 1432 Sir Theobald Gorges alias Russell* had spent many years fruitlessly trying to establish his title to it, before finally, in 1468, accepting that it now belonged to Worsop. It came into the draper’s possession by a series of transactions sealed in 1457, when it was held by the earl of Wiltshire and his feoffees, so it looks likely that he had obtained it through his determination to recoup the losses he had suffered as the earl’s creditor.
Curiously, it was only at a very late stage in his life, in the 1470s, that Worsop began actively to participate in the government of London. Earlier on, he had shown an interest in the welfare of certain city orphans,
