According to an obituary William Wallis was
a great favourite of the late King William, and was in all the wars in Flanders with him; and being advanced to a high station upon his coming to England, was possessed of an estate in Hertfordshire of £30,000, but being unfortunately engaged for the receiver-general of excise in the beginning of the reign of Queen Anne, his estate was seized upon for the revenues of excise. He was present in the chamber when the late King William died, and has since been supported by the nobility and gentry of the kingdom.
Hist. Reg. 1737, p. 127.
He bought lands in Datchworth, Hertfordshire, in 1693 and Wormleybury in 1697, being then of Holborn, Middlesex.
must be sensible how shameful a price you extorted from him when he made an agreement with you for the few houses you had at Steyning, and for which he has not to this day any of the most material writings necessary to make out his title,
and that therefore he could only send him £5.
He died 4 Feb. 1737, aged 80, in the rules of the Fleet.
