A somewhat elusive figure, Wychard owed his connexion with Bedfordshire to his second marriage and his seat in the Commons to his patron, Henry Holand, duke of Exeter. Of obscure background,
In the summer of 1439 Wychard was a member of the retinue which Holand took to France as the new lieutenant of Gascony, and in the following March the earl granted houses in Bordeaux and the vicinity of St Macaire to him and John Vill, another esquire of his household. Sent to Gascony to counteract aggressive French campaigns against the duchy, Huntingdon succeeded in recapturing the fortress at La Roquette, which had posed a threat to English shipping in the Gironde, and in late August 1440 he and Sir Thomas Rempston†, seneschal of Gascony, began a long and ultimately successful siege of Tartas.
It seems that at this date Wychard was mainly associated with south-west England, in spite of his first wife’s lands in Sussex. It was ‘of Somerset’, the county from which he derived his £10 annuity, that he stood surety for the Holand trustees, and by then he was farming the Dorset hundred of Redhone and Beaminster Forum from the Crown.
It was as of Bedfordshire that Wychard took part in the quarrel between his patron, Henry Holand, and Ralph, Lord Cromwell, over the Ampthill estate in that county. Cromwell had bought these lands from the executors of John Cornwall, Lord Fanhope, but Exeter, having manufactured a false claim, seized them in June 1452. Cromwell responded by taking legal action in the common pleas against the duke and his retainers. Wychard was a defendant in one of the suits he brought. In pleadings of Easter term of 1453, Cromwell alleged that eight of Exeter’s servants, including Sir Henry Norbury* and Wychard (described as ‘late of Chawston’), had entered the manor at Ampthill and carried away goods worth no less than £1,000.
In May 1454, two months after York had assumed the office of Protector of England, Exeter and Thomas Percy, Lord Egremont, rebelled in northern England. There is no evidence that Wychard was involved in the uprising or that he followed his patron’s example and took up arms for the Lancastrian cause during the later years of Henry VI’s reign. Whatever his political sympathies, his age may have prevented him from playing an active part in the civil wars, although it is striking that he is not heard of in the after 1455. He next comes into view in 1465 when Thomas Rede sued him and his wife in the common pleas for the manor of Chawston. The parties were ordered to appear at Westminster on the quindene of Trinity that year, on which day Rede was represented by his attorney, Alice appeared in person and Wychard (who had perhaps followed Exeter into exile abroad) defaulted. Rede claimed the manor through his descent from the Grymbaudes, earlier lords of Chawston, but Alice referred to a settlement, made by her previous husband’s feoffees, which recognized her right to hold it for life, with reversion to Roger, her son by Hunt. The case dragged on for a number of years and Wychard died before it was resolved. In the autumn of 1467 the sheriff of Bedfordshire was ordered to take the manor into the King’s hand after the by then widowed Alice had failed to appear in the common pleas on a given return day, but ultimately Rede was unsuccessful in his claim and in due course Chawston reverted to the Hunt family.
It is not known exactly when Wychard died. His will has not survived but the records of the common pleas reveal that he appointed Alice and his stepson, John Hunt, as his executors. It was as such that the pair pursued suits for debt in that court in the late 1460s, against the Northamptonshire esquire, Thomas Osberne, and William Synyer, a husbandman from Bowley in Sussex. In one of these suits they claimed that Wychard had leased his first wife’s share of the Jardyn manor at South Mundham and Bowley to Osberne at Michaelmas 1463, for a three-year term at 13 marks p.a., and that he still owed 12 marks in rent. The action they brought against Synyer, for a sum of £4 13s. 4d., had yet to come to pleadings in June 1469 when the husbandman was pardoned his outlawry for failing to answer their suit.
