In 1417-18 Skinner’s chattels in Hythe were valued at £16, and two years later at £20. His maltolts show that he traded in cattle and other livestock, and also in beer brewed by his wife. Rent from leases earned him 15s. p.a.
In the first year he served as a jurat (1419) Skinner was kept busy helping to conduct Hythe’s many lawsuits. We hear of him obtaining a supersedeas against the churchwardens of St. Leonard’s parish, and going on the town’s business to Dover in March, on the orders of the warden of the Cinque Ports. That same month he was sent to Canterbury to discover when the chancellor was expected in Kent, and he returned there again in April to show the j.p.s then in session a writ excusing the barons of Hythe from sitting on county juries.
John, who is not recorded after 1432, was perhaps the father of Henry Skinner, Hythe’s common clerk from 1442, who died in 1461.
