The Wykehams of Broughton owed their status to William’s great, great-uncle and namesake, William of Wykeham (d.1404), bishop of Winchester. William’s father was born Thomas Perrot, a younger son of the obscure William Perrot of Ash, Hampshire, but he and his brothers had the singular good fortune of becoming protégés of the bishop, whose surname they adopted. Found a place in Richard II’s household, Thomas also spent a few years in the 1390s studying civil law at New College, his patron’s foundation at Oxford. More significantly, he became the bishop’s sole heir after the death without issue of his elder brother (yet another William) in 1401, and in due course he inherited Broughton and several other manors in Oxfordshire, Hampshire and Somerset. According to Robert Lowth, William of Wykeham’s 18th-century biographer, these estates were worth as much as £400 p.a. Possibly this was an overestimate although Thomas, who augmented his inheritance by means of several purchases, was certainly a wealthy landowner. Knighted before the end of Henry IV’s reign, he enjoyed a busy career as a j.p., ad hoc commissioner and sheriff in several counties, as well as a knight of the shire for Oxfordshire in four Parliaments.
In the Parliament of 1422 Sir Thomas Wykeham sat alongside the influential Thomas Chaucer*, in turn a cousin of the powerful Beaufort family. It was probably through Chaucer that the subject of this biography enlisted for service in France with Sir Edmund Beaufort, later duke of Somerset, in February 1427.
Service abroad must have provided a useful outlet for Wykeham’s energies while he was waiting to succeed his long-lived father. Sir Thomas Wykeham’s longevity probably explains why his son had a considerably less extensive career than him as a local office-holder. While of sufficient consequence in his own right to swear the widely-administered oath to keep the peace in 1434,
The bulk of Sir Thomas Wykeham’s estates passed to his eldest son after he died in October 1443. In Oxfordshire William succeeded to Broughton, the manor and hundred of Bloxham, the manor of North Newington and a quarter share of that of Standlake; in Hampshire he inherited the manors of Ash and Quidhampton, along with the reversion of another at Burghclere. Sir Thomas had provided for his younger children by settling Otterbourne and Church Oakley, two other manors in the latter county, on his second son and namesake, and giving his two daughters at least a temporary interest in his manors of Burnham and Brean in Somerset. As it happened, the younger Thomas died without issue, meaning that in due course the Hampshire properties, like those in Somerset, passed to his elder brother as well.
Within five years of succeeding his father, Wykeham secured a husband for his daughter and only child, Margaret, who was married to William Fiennes, son and heir of James Fiennes*, 1st Lord Saye and Sele, in early 1448.
At the time of the rebellion Wykeham was serving as sheriff of Oxfordshire and Berkshire. While sheriff, he was forced to attend to a private matter, a dispute between him and a London skinner, Thomas Sherde. Sherde took action in the common pleas at Westminster, alleging in pleadings of Michaelmas term 1450 that Wykeham owed him just under £5 for 66 skins (marten and lamb) purchased from him in London six years earlier. Wykeham denied owing the skinner any money and the matter was referred to a jury. Yet it is unlikely that the proposed trial, still pending in the spring of 1455, ever took place.
Having completed his term as sheriff, Wykeham continued to serve as a j.p. but personal affairs dominated his later years. By means of settlements of 1453 and 1455, he ensured that his wife would enjoy an interest for life in his manors of Broughton, North Newington and Bloxham.
Wykeham was succeeded by his daughter and heir, Margaret Fiennes, by then about 28 years of age.
Margaret’s husband was far poorer than his father, since the lands James Fiennes had held by royal grant were resumed during the Parliament of 1450. Furthermore, it appears that William was taken prisoner during the civil wars, so compounding his financial difficulties. Forced to mortgage many of his estates, some of which he afterwards sold, he also disposed of some of his wife’s inheritance, selling the manor of Otterbourne to William Waynflete, bishop of Winchester, for £180 in 1458. In spite of his problems, William was not an insignificant figure. Although a member of the Household since the early 1440s, he seems to have escaped the opprobrium attached to his father. First summoned to the Lords in 1451, he was also a member of that House in the next eight Parliaments. He attended a meeting of the Council in the spring of 1454 but subsequently threw in his lot with the Yorkists, joining the earl of Warwick at the battle of Northampton in 1460. Although close to the earl during the early 1460s, he stayed loyal to Edward IV in 1469, accompanying the Yorkist King into exile in the following year. Upon his return to England, he was killed fighting for Edward at the battle of Barnet.
Following Fiennes’s death, Margaret married John Hervy, apparently a kinsman of the Hervys of Thurleigh, Bedfordshire.
