Although there are difficulties in reconstructing the biography of the MP for Lyme Regis, since the name of John Wyke or Wykes was a very common one in this period,
John was party to final concords of 1457 and 1461 in which his mother’s share of the former Romsey inheritance was listed as moieties of 15 manors, 26 messuages and annual rents of some £19 in Hampshire, Wiltshire and Somerset,
While these lawsuits over the former Romsey estates preoccupied Wyke in his later years, they had not affected the path of his career, which had begun long before. In 1440, in association with his parents, he had taken possession of a house in East Street, Bridport, which all three were to hold for term of their lives.
Although the MP needs to be distinguished from his cousin John, the son of Richard Wyke of North Wyke,
During this second session of the Parliament, Wyke was able to secure reappointment to his post at Poole, which he then occupied for more than three years. While in office, and described as ‘of Bindon, Devon, gentleman’, he took out a pardon.
At the end of that year Wyke was elected to the Commons for a second time, to sit in the Parliament summoned in the name of the restored Henry VI. No returns for this Parliament survive, and his presence there is only known from a petition directed to the chancellor by his servant Richard Dygon, who claimed the parliamentary privilege of freedom of arrest and imprisonment in actions of debt and trespass on the basis that his master, Wyke, was then an MP.
In his final years Wyke acquired and then disposed of land in Dorset, at Sturminster Marshall and Wimbourne Minster, and in June 1480 he and his second wife were pardoned for the acquisition from John, Lord Strange of Knockin, of the manor of Sturminster Marshall, which was held of the King in chief.
