Wyot’s family came from Kimmeridge in the Isle of Purbeck, and in 1391 he was named with his parents in a settlement of land there, which the three of them were to hold for term of their lives by grant of Henry Smedmore.
In Weymouth, Wyot set up in business as a merchant, and although there is little information about his trading interests, he is known to have formed commercial contacts with men of Devon and Somerset; indeed, the places where his debtors and creditors lived suggest that his dealings extended throughout the West Country. For instance, early in the century he sued a man from Honiton for a debt of £6, pursuing him in the law courts to the point of outlawry; and he himself owed more than twice that sum to Robert Wattes of Queen Camel, an amount which was still outstanding when Wattes made his will in 1405.
Wyot began to participate in the government of Weymouth around the same time, and two years after attesting the borough’s return to the Parliament of 1417 he served a term as bailiff. His trading activities attracted unwelcome attention in the autumn of 1421. Commissioners appointed to investigate smuggling and other concealments of royal revenue in Dorset heard information that on various occasions within the previous four years several men of Weymouth, including Wyot and Thomas Payn*, had loaded 20,000 woolfells on board vessels at Melcombe Regis, to ship overseas. Yet the jurors expressed uncertainty as to whether or not the required customs and subsidies had been paid, and it may be that the Weymouth men escaped prosecution.
Wyot died at an unknown date before November 1434. It was then that his widow Agnes and feoffees, including John Abbot I*, formally relinquished their title to his tenement in Weymouth’s High Street (on the quay adjoining the common landing place), to his creditor William Mountfort.
