Walter Reynell (died 1475)

[1][2][3] Born about 1395, he was the son of Walter Reynell (died after 1424), a landowner who sat as MP for Devon in 1404, and his second wife Margaret Stighull (died before 1399), daughter of William Stighull and his wife Elizabeth Malston.

[1][2][3] In 1415, at a young age, he was serving in the army of King Henry V in Normandy.

[3] Back in England, after the death of his father he was sworn as a justice of the peace for Devon in 1434 and in 1435 was involved in an acrimonious lawsuit over inherited land in Cambridgeshire.

From 1442 onwards his name appears on royal commissions for Devon and as a witness to a court case in the port of Dartmouth.

After he had sat as MP for Totnes in 1447, a royal commission was appointed in July 1450 to enquire into the names of the malefactors who, together with Robert Wennington of Dartmouth, an MP and privateer, had assaulted and illegally imprisoned Walter Reynell “so that his life was despaired of” until he provided Wennington a written release from all law suits.

Arms of Reynell: Argent, masonry sable a chief indented of the second as shown in The Visitations of the County of Devon .
Arms of Reynell impaling Walrond ( Argent, three bull's heads cabossed sable armed or ), symbolising the marriage of Walter Reynell and Joan Walrond. Detail from monument in East Ogwell Church to their great-grandson Richard Reynell (1519-1585).