More may be added to the earlier biography.
In 1420, soon after coming into his inheritance (of which his mother had held the bulk until her death in 1418), Peyto charged his manor of Wolfhampcote with an annual rent of £10 to be paid, for a period of nine years, to the Coventry merchant, William Botener.
Peyto’s part in the disputed Warwickshire election of 1427 is open to more than one interpretation. He was accused of having come to the county court at the head of an armed band to set aside the election of John Mallory* in favour of his own. This has been seen in terms of a struggle amongst the local baronage: in Mallory the county court elected an MP inimical to the interests of the leading local magnate, Richard Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, then absent in France, and Peyto, as one of the earl’s leading men, acted in the earl’s interest to supersede the election.
The best years of Peyto’s career were dominated by the war in France. His military career was yet more distinguished than suggested in the earlier biography. In addition to the commands cited there, he held lieutenancies under his principal patron, the earl of Warwick, at Aumale, and under John Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury, at Neufchâtel-en-Bray and Rouen. More notably still, he was briefly Shrewsbury’s deputy as marshal of France in the period just before he fell into the hands of the French at the siege of Dieppe.
By the summer of 1454, Peyto’s son and heir, John, had married Eleanor, daughter of Robert Manfeld*. Manfeld was an important figure – an esquire of the royal body and master of the mint – and the match must have owed something to our MP’s connexion with Edmund Beaufort, duke of Somerset, then the dominant figure at the royal court. The marriage portion was used to redeem the manors of Sowe and Great Wyrley, which had been mortgaged in 1451 for redemption at Midsummer 1454, and probably also that of Chesterton.
Peyto’s freedom was, however, brief for he was again committed to the Marshalsea in the following June, on this occasion pending payment to Hathwick. Remarkably, if the legal record is to be taken literally, he remained confined until 16 May 1459, when William Brandon†, as marshal of the Marshalsea, illegally released him.
Soon after winning his freedom Peyto made a further curious financial undertaking. On 9 June 1459 he entered into a statute staple at Westminster in £100 to his own son, John. Perhaps the latter had belatedly come to his aid, but it is much more likely that the purpose of the statute was to defraud the family’s creditors. John already had his father’s manors of Sowe and Great Wyrley, and the statute raised a potential charge on his other manor at Chesterton. That charge was placed four years later when John sued execution on the statute. An inquisition held at Warwick on 5 Nov. 1463 found that Sir William was seised of that manor, and its issues were duly put to paying John. Sir William himself, however, avoided the arrest that was part of the execution process when the sheriff returned that he was too infirm to be removed from Chesterton to the gaol at Warwick. Whether by fraud or not, Peyto’s lands were now beyond his creditors and death soon afterwards meant that he was also.
The confusion in Peyto’s affairs raised an obvious difficulty on his death, namely how was his widow, Katherine, to be provided for, since all his lands were now in the hands of their son. An inquisition on 4 Jan. 1466 asserted her right to jointure in the manor of Chesterton under a settlement made in 1429; whereas another, held on 6 Aug. 1467, found that Peyto died seised of the manor under a settlement made before their marriage, although Katherine had, none the less, taken the issues since his death. These contradictory findings suggest a dispute between mother and son.
