| Constituency | Dates |
|---|---|
| Huntingdon | 1433 |
Attestor, parlty. elections, Huntingdon 1431, 1432, 1435, 1437, 1442, 1447, 1449 (Feb.), 1450.
Bailiff, Huntingdon Mich. 1435–6, 1453–4;1 JUST3/220/1; Add. Chs. 33543, 33557–8, 33560–1. coroner Jan. 1461.2 Add. Ch. 33570.
Never one of the most prominent inhabitants of his borough, the obscure Segington served twice as a bailiff of Huntingdon after sitting in the Commons. His name appears as a witness to conveyances of property in the town, from Roger Hunt* to two other burgesses, John Chiksond* and John Abbotsley*, in July 1435, and from Chiksond to John Ansty* and others in February 1437. He was a feoffee for Abbotsley, who conveyed various properties in the town, including a messuage called The Crown, to hold in trust. At the end of the 1450s or early in the following decade, William Moigne, claiming to have purchased these holdings, sued Segington and his co-feoffees in Chancery for failing to release them to him.3 Add. Chs. 33541-2, 33544; C1/29/43.
