| Constituency | Dates |
|---|---|
| Truro | [1413 (May)] |
| Southampton | [1417], [1419], [1420], 1427, 1429, 1431, 1432, 1433, 1435, 1442 |
Attestor, parlty. elections, Hants 1427, 1431, 1432, 1437, 1442.
Commr. Hants Feb. 1422 – Nov. 1444; of gaol delivery, Southampton Nov. 1439 (q.), Winchester castle Nov. 1442.2 C66/445, m. 19d; 455, m. 35d.
Recorder, Southampton prob. by 1428–?d.3 He was still receiving a fee and livery as recorder in July 1442: Southampton City Archs., steward’s bk. SC5/1/6, f. 7.
J.p.q. Hants 28 Oct. 1439 – d.
Parlty. proxy for the abbot of Hyde 1439.4 SC10/49/2434.
More can be added to the earlier biography.5 The Commons 1386-1421, ii. 513-14. Besides acting as an attorney on behalf of clients, Chamberlain brought suits in the court of common pleas on his own account. For example, in 1422 he sued William Overey* together with a carpenter and a mason for forced entry into his house in Southampton and theft of timber worth £10; in the Michaelmas term of 1435 (when up at Westminster for his tenth Parliament) he appeared in court in person to bring pleas against a butcher from Petersfield, two husbandmen from Totton and others including a goldsmith, for debts amounting to over £34; and he was again a plaintiff four years later.6 CP40/647, rot. 94; 699, rots. 288, 601; 715, rots. 359d, 620d. That his first wife was indeed the widow of Henry Keswick is made clear from a suit she and her fellow executor of Keswick’s will brought in the common pleas in 1426.7 CP40/661, rot. 97.
Chamberlain was among the lawyers whom the warden and fellows of Winchester College paid for their counsel: he received an annual fee of one mark from 1429 until the year before his death.8 T.F. Kirby, Annals of Winchester, 189; N. and Q. ser. 12, i. 361-3. He was still recorder of Southampton when returned to his last Parliament in 1442. His parliamentary wages on that as on other occasions were 2s. a day, which amounted to £6 16s. for 68 days’ service, but this was not paid until 21 July, nearly four months after his return home.9 Southampton steward’s bk., SC5/1/6, f. 7. His status as a landowner gave him armigerous rank and a substantial income, so it is not surprising that he was twice distrained for refusing to take up knighthood.
- 1. In 1428 William conveyed to his brother, Robert Chamberlain esquire, all his holdings in Grampound which had lately belonged to John Stephen his uncle: Add. Ch. 13047.
- 2. C66/445, m. 19d; 455, m. 35d.
- 3. He was still receiving a fee and livery as recorder in July 1442: Southampton City Archs., steward’s bk. SC5/1/6, f. 7.
- 4. SC10/49/2434.
- 5. The Commons 1386-1421, ii. 513-14.
- 6. CP40/647, rot. 94; 699, rots. 288, 601; 715, rots. 359d, 620d.
- 7. CP40/661, rot. 97.
- 8. T.F. Kirby, Annals of Winchester, 189; N. and Q. ser. 12, i. 361-3.
- 9. Southampton steward’s bk., SC5/1/6, f. 7.
