Wychecotes had an unusual career, holding major county office in two widely separated counties and representing in Parliament a borough distant from both. He was from a minor Shropshire gentry family, perhaps the son and heir of another John Wychecotes, who was returned in 1431 as seised of property at Whichcott, near Ludlow, and at nearby Great Sutton (in Diddlebury).
The stages by which Wychecotes’s curious career developed are difficult to discern. The first reference to him comes in an unexpected context: on 29 Aug. 1444 he was implicated in the death of one Richard Southcote at Toller Porcorum in Dorset. This was an episode in the violent dispute between Sir James Butler, son and heir of the earl of Ormond, and William Stafford* over the inheritance of Stafford’s niece, who was Butler’s wife. Wychecotes was acting as one of Butler’s retinue, and it must be assumed that he had been drawn into his service through the Shropshire lands Butler had acquired from his grandmother, Joan Beauchamp, Lady Abergavenny. The matter was soon brought to what was, from Wychecotes’s point of view, a satisfactory conclusion: on 25 Oct. 1445 he appeared to answer an appeal of murder sued by the victim’s brother, calling on two Shropshire men, John Horde* and Thomas Luyt*, as his sureties, and, on the following 12 May, he pleaded a pardon.
Yet, if acting in support of Butler in Dorset is a surprising context in which to find the head of an insignificant Shropshire family, even more so is his marriage to the coheiress of a junior branch of one of the principal gentry families of Lincolnshire, the Tirwhits. This match transformed his prospects. It had been made by 20 Dec. 1445, when he and his wife Elizabeth entered into an indenture with the head of that family, Sir William Tirwhit*. The knight agreed that Elizabeth, as one of the three daughters of his late younger brother, John, and Wychecotes should have all the lands he and others held by John’s feoffment, principally the manor of Harpswell, not far from Gainsborough. The couple were to hold the lands at a nominal rent during their own lives and those of Elizabeth’s issue, but on the failure of that issue, a rent of £100 p.a. (far in excess of the value of the lands), was to be payable to the feoffees and their heirs.
Although his marriage cannot be explained on the surviving evidence, it is clear that, by the time it was made, Wychecotes was establishing himself as a man of greater substance than his ancestors. He seems to have moved from the service of Butler to that of Butler’s brother-in-law, Sir John Talbot, son and heir-apparent of John Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury, by Maud Furnival: on 23 June 1445 he named Sir John and the Shropshire lawyer, William Lacon I*, as trustees in his goods and chattels.
When Wychecotes next emerges in an administrative role it is in a different guise again. On 14 May 1458 he was appointed as deputy butler in the port of Kingston-upon-Hull, and here there can be no doubt that he owed his appointment to Sir John Talbot, who had succeeded to the earldom of Shrewsbury in 1453. Talbot, then treasurer, had been appointed as chief butler only eight days before.
Wychecotes’s election to the Parliament suggest that, despite his earlier service to the Lancastrian Butlers and Talbots and in the household of Henry VI, his political sympathies lay with York. This suggestion is confirmed by his inclusion, alongside the duke of York, and the earls of March, Salisbury and Warwick, among the feoffees of the Lincolnshire knight, Sir Henry Retford of Castlethorpe, who fell in the Yorkist cause at the battle of Wakefield.
Alongside his administrative duties, Wychecotes also acted as a merchant. It may be that his trading interests, perhaps originating in the mercantile connexions of his wife through her first husband, may have recommended him to Talbot as a deputy butler in 1458, but there is no firm evidence of these interests until a little later. On 1 Nov. 1460, while an MP, he joined two merchants of Coventry in entering bonds totalling about £90 to the Hull customs collectors, and it is probable that these related to the export of wool through that port. At this date he was still the port’s deputy butler and he continued in the office in the 1460s. On the following 7 July he appeared in person in the Exchequer to pursue a local merchant for the non-payment of customs due on a cargo of wine, and three days later he was re-appointed as deputy butler in Hull under the new chief butler, John Wenlock*, Lord Wenlock.
In the 1470s Wychecotes was less active. Given his Yorkist sympathies, it is surprising that he should have retained his place on the Lindsey bench during the Readeption, only to be removed, albeit briefly, when the bench was re-ordered on Edward IV’s restoration.
