Probably either a younger brother or son of Richard Wythigg*, Thomas was a brewer, general merchant and ‘woolman’. Perhaps through his involvement in the wool trade, he became associated with the tailors’ craft at Oxford, for which he provided generously in his will, although it was as a brewer that he usually features in surviving records. At Oxford, the chancellor of the university exercised the local assize of bread and ale and regulated brewing in the town. According to an inquest held before the chancellor in March 1450, Wythigg, Robert Wood II* and other brewers had breached the assize by making beer that was both weak and unfit for human consumption (corpori humano insalubrem). Furthermore, they had responded to a previous attempt to bring them to book, by refusing to supply the university’s halls with beer.
Wythigg’s brewery lay at Grandpont on the southern outskirts of the town.
When she made her will, dated 2 Nov. 1427,
It was after his first wife’s death that Wythigg began his career as an office-holder at Oxford. His rise through the municipal hierarchy was typical, in as much as he served as a chamberlain and bailiff before becoming an alderman. The account covering his year as chamberlain has survived. It shows that he and his associate in that office, Robert Walford alias Sadeler*, had an eventful term, coinciding as it did with a dispute between the townsmen of Oxford and Thomas Chace, the chancellor of Oxford university. The dispute dominates the account, which records that he and Walford collected an aid of £12 6s. 8d. from their fellow townsmen in aid of the town’s legal expenses that year, although this was far from sufficient to cover those expenses, which amounted to £21 17s. 7d. Walford rode to London on errands related to the quarrel with Chace on several occasions, but it is unclear whether Wythigg likewise travelled to the city on the same business. The town also went to the trouble of consulting Domesday Book, an exercise costing 20s. ½d., and returning its mayor Thomas Coventre I* to the Parliament of 1429, to ensure that its claims were effectively represented there. The Parliament was in session at the time of Henry VI’s coronation on 6 Nov. that year, and the account shows that the town spent a further £4 15s. in upholding the traditional right of its mayor and other burgesses to assist the butler of England at the coronation feast.
By the time of his own return to the Commons nearly two decades later, Wythigg was well respected as an alderman of several years’ standing. While he was an MP, the university chancellor’s court acknowledged him as ‘discretus et honestus vir’ when he appeared there to appoint proxies to act for him in his absence shortly before he departed for the second session of the Parliament of February 1449.
After leaving the Commons, Wythigg remained an alderman but appears not to have held any other office within Oxford. During the spring of 1451, he helped to arbitrate in a dispute that had come before the university chancellor’s court, where he again appeared a few years later, as a surety for other Oxford residents, both townsmen and members of the university.
Just over four years later, Wythigg conveyed all his personal property to Thomas Rede of London to hold in trust, but for what reason is unknown.
Still alive in February 1459, when he conveyed a tenement and garden at Grandpont to the Oxford tailor John Lowe,
