Perhaps a lawyer by training, Walter pursued the career of a useful functionary. A fanciful pedigree gives him several knightly ancestors,
In terms of landed wealth, Walter was largely a self-made man who bought most of his estates. His limited inheritance comprised a manor at High Laver in Essex and holdings in Southwark which came to him from his mother, and a contingent interest in two manors in Chigwell and Barking from his father. He had some years to wait to succeed to his mother’s lands, for Eleanor Writtle, subsequently the wife of Richard Priour, was still alive in the early 1450s. As for Chigwell and Barking, these did not pass to the Writtles in the MP’s own lifetime.
While neither of Writtle’s wives brought him into possession of lands of any significance at the time of their marriages, his first wife, Joan, was the heir of both her father and her father’s younger brother, also named John Hende*. As it happened, Joan did not live long enough to succeed to the Hende estates, comprising a dozen or so manors and other lands in Essex and Kent. Yet after the deaths of her grandmother, Elizabeth (formerly the wife of John Hende the draper and afterwards of Ralph Butler, Lord Sudeley), in 1462 and the younger John Hende two years later, these properties passed to John Writtle, her infant son and heir by Walter.
Walter’s first recorded office was that of escheator in Essex and Hertfordshire, to which he was appointed in December 1450. He continued to serve the Crown at a local level until his death although he owed his brief Exchequer career of the mid 1450s to Henry Bourgchier rather than to the direct appointment of the King. He also found employment with the Augustinian priory of Little Dunmow, Essex, which appointed him steward of its estates in that county (with an annual fee of 20s. while one John Sandon was still alive and 40s. thereafter), at some stage in the 1450s or 1460s. The appointment was for life but it is impossible to tell whether he did in fact retain the stewardship for the whole of that that term.
It is very likely that Writtle was already Bourgchier’s man when he became escheator, not least because of the pre-existing connexions between them: Bourgchier’s father had acted as a feoffee for John Hende the draper; Bourgchier himself retained Robert Writtle’s associates, Robert Darcy and Richard Baynard for their legal counsel; and Walter was Bourgchier’s tenant at Little Hallingbury, Halstead, Stansted and Colne Engaine in Essex. Writtle counted Bourgchier and other members of his affinity among his feoffees, and in the mid 1450s he stood surety at the Exchequer for his master’s son and namesake.
An ally and brother-in-law of Richard, duke of York, Bourgchier became treasurer of England following the Yorkist victory at the battle of St. Albans in May 1455. An office in his gift as treasurer was that of clerk of estreats at the Exchequer, to which he appointed Walter on the following 19 June. The latter held that position, for which he received an annual fee of £10,
A few months after the dissolution of the Parliament of 1455, Writtle began a suit in the Exchequer against John Wingfield†, the sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk when that assembly was summoned. He asserted that Wingfield had wrongfully returned William Jenney* as one of the knights of the shire for Suffolk to the Parliament, because a majority of the electors had actually chosen William Lee‡ to sit alongside the county’s other MP, Wingfield’s brother, Robert*. In response to Writtle’s claim, the ex-sheriff stated that he was already subject to a similar action by William Mounteney and that this was still sub judice. Assuming the case against John Wingfield was true, it is hard to explain why Lee had not taken legal action himself. No doubt financial gain was Writtle’s primary motivation, since he made a claim for £100, the sum awarded by statutes of 1429 and 1445 against sheriffs who made false returns. The Exchequer plea rolls do not record a conclusion to the case and it is unlikely he ever received his hoped for reward. Both Jenney and Lee were servants of John Mowbray, 3rd duke of Norfolk, suggesting that personal rivalries among the duke’s followers may have played a part in the affair, although there is no evidence that Writtle himself had a connexion with Mowbray.
Following the Yorkist victory at the battle of Northampton in July 1460, Bourgchier was for a second time appointed treasurer of England and he continued in office after the accession of Edward IV who created him earl of Essex. He remained treasurer until April 1462, employing Writtle on several occasions during this second term to collect instalments of his fee as treasurer from the Exchequer. Like his patron, Writtle benefited from Edward’s accession. He regained his place on the commission of the peace in Essex, on which he had not sat since 1458, and of which he became a member of the quorum for the first time. He was also made surveyor of customs at Bristol and a customs collector at Sandwich. The latter position was clearly no sinecure: in March 1462 he and his fellow collector, the London draper, John Shukburgh, were granted £50 as a special reward for their work, and four months later (by which date they had left office) a further sum of £31 8s. 4d. In November the same year Writtle and John Oter, acting on behalf of Bourgchier and the earl of Warwick, collected £300 from the Exchequer for the wages and expenses of the two peers, both of whom were then campaigning against the Lancastrian forces in the north of England.
No doubt Bourgchier supported Writtle’s election as a knight of the shire to the Parliaments of 1467 and 1472 and his appointments as sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire in November 1468 and April 1471. A few days into the first of these terms as sheriff , the King excused him from having to account for nearly £200 of the issues of his bailiwick.
Although Edward IV recovered control of his kingdom in October 1469, the series of crises marking the latter part of his first reign was not over and he fled the realm in the face of renewed rebellion a year later. Writtle’s links with the Yorkist Bourgchier probably explain why he lost his place on the Essex bench when Henry VI was restored to the throne, and in the Readeption period he took the precaution of securing a royal pardon.
By then approaching the end of his life, Writtle drew up his will two years later. In the will, dated 6 Oct. 1473,
In May 1475 the MP’s widow and three associates, Starkey, (Sir) Thomas Urswyk II, chief baron of the Exchequer, and the Exchequer official, William Essex*, obtained the wardship of her stepson from the Crown.
