It is not always easy to distinguish Wright from possible namesakes although it is likely that the burgess who attested the Cambridge return to the Parliament of 1411 was an older townsman of the same name. It is unclear, for example, whether the MP should be identified with the Richard Wright who married Margaret, widow of Thomas Hervey of Ely. Yet it is worth noting that two Cambridge townsmen, Thomas Hancheche* and Richard Bush*, were pledges for the couple when they sued one of her first husband’s feoffees in Chancery, probably between 1433 and 1443.
In short, the only evidence that seems definitely to relate to the subject of this biography is that summarized in the cursus honorum above, since it was surely the MP who held these offices, of which he served no fewer than five terms as mayor. During the second of these terms, he transferred part of Mill Street in the town to the King, for the endowment of Henry VI’s foundation of King’s College,
Wright sat in Parliament late in his career, sitting in the Commons while also holding the offices of mayor and j.p. He took part in his last parliamentary election in 1453, the same year in which he ceased to hold office at Cambridge. It is possible that he died soon afterwards, since in January 1455 a Joan Wright, ‘late of Cambridge, widow’, was pardoned the outlawry she had incurred for failing to answer a plaintiff at Westminster over an action of debt and detinue arising from dealings between the parties in Surrey.
