It is quite likely that this MP was the Henry Wendover who was regularly granted writs of aid to buy victuals for the royal household for at least nine years from the closing months of Henry IV’s reign and through most if not all of that of Henry V.
Meanwhile, Wyndover had appeared in person in the court of common pleas in the Michaelmas term of 1422 to sue two local mariners for a debt of six marks. By that date he had also acquired land beyond the walls of Chichester, for it was as ‘of Nyton, husbandman’ that in the following Hilary term he was accused of assaulting John Halle and taking his crops worth £5 outside the west gate of the city. Evidently, his quarrel with Halle was a serious one, for a year later he brought a plea against Halle and his wife in the King’s bench, alleging that in the autumn of 1422 they had broken into his closes at Aldingbourne (about four miles from Chichester), cut down trees and underwood and stolen his goods.
Something of his standing in Sussex is suggested not only by his appearance on the list of those in the locality required to take the oath not to maintain law-breakers, as administered throughout England in 1434, but also by his service as a juror in a suit between Eleanor, widow of John, Lord Arundel and Mautravers (the de jure earl of Arundel), and Robert Mousehole* of Midhurst in the autumn of 1435.
Wyndover’s widow, Agnes, married William Style, and at an unknown date between 1456 and 1460 they complained to the chancellor about the performance of her late husband’s will. They explained that Wyndover had made enfeoffments of his lands and tenements in the parish of Aldingbourne and elsewhere in Sussex, intending that the feoffees should make estate to Agnes if she survived him. Furthermore, on his deathbed he had devised by will that Agnes should have certain other properties for life, notably The Corone, which was to be sold after her death to provide prayers for his soul’s welfare. Three of the feoffees had refused to carry out his instructions.
