The family of Wroughton or Worfton had been settled at Broad Hinton since 1365, and had held the Wiltshire manor of Woodhill in Clyffe Pypard since 1381.
It was presumably John’s guardians who arranged his first marriage, to Jane Darell, whose father William had been under treasurer of England. The marriage may have been contracted before March 1438 when the disputed Wroughton manor of Beversbrook was conveyed to William Darell by Thomas Cricklade*.
Wroughton came of age before January 1449, when he attested the Wiltshire elections to Parliament,
Wroughton was distrained to take up knighthood in 1458 and 1465, but declined to do so, on the latter occasion being fined five marks for his recalcitrance.
Meanwhile, Wroughton’s personal standing and income had been enhanced by his second marriage, to Margaret Carent. This probably took place round about July 1469 when his father-in-law John Carent was among the feoffees for the settlement of Wroughton’s property in Devon on him and his wife in tail-male.
Besides what wealth Margaret brought to Wroughton from the estate of her former husband, she also presented him with her Carent inheritance. Her father had settled on her and Filoll his manor of Kyngeston by Byre in Dorset, and when he died in 1478 she also inherited those of Todber and Knightstreet, subject to the life-interest of her stepmother.
Before he married Margaret, Wroughton had set about arranging suitable matches for his children by his first wife, most notably a double marriage with the family of the judge Sir Richard Chokke (d.1483): Wroughton’s son and heir Christopher was married to the judge’s daughter Jane, and before August 1468 his daughter Elizabeth was wedded to Chokke’s eldest son John.
Besides this, Wroughton had other affairs to settle as he neared the end of his life. In 1491 he arranged that after his death and that of his second wife, his estates in Devon and Gloucestershire would pass in tail-male to their sons Thomas, Alexander and John.
Our MP’s great-grandson, Sir William Wroughton† (d.1559), carried on the family tradition by representing Wiltshire in Parliament (twice), although when two of his sons came to be elected to the Commons it was with the inferior status of parliamentary burgesses.
