15th Century
At the death in 1419 of William Mowbray's widow Margaret, who had afterwards married William Cheyne, the Advowson passed to William Ingilby, son of the Mowbrays' daughter Eleanor. It was perhaps the same William Ingilby who died in 1438 and was succeeded by his son John (d. 1456), whose heir was his son William.
In 1473 the advowson was held by the king during William Ingilby’s minority. It was presumably the same William who died in 1501.
In the first quarter of the 15th Century the present Church tower was built
Like Scoreby, the manor was held by the Nevilles after the partition of the earl of Warwick's estates in 1474 by the duke of Gloucester. On ascending the throne Richard III kept it in hand and in the 1490s it was accounted for along with Sheriff Hutton. In 1489 and later the Eglesfields were among those holding the bailiwick (estate management) of the manor.
Wilberfoss priory was licensed in 1483 to acquire land in Sutton worth £6 13s. 4d., and the former estate of Robert Hoton was granted by the Crown
John de Eglesfield, the first of that name to become possessed of the Manor of Sutton in the early part of the 16th Century, had licence to marry Joan Thompson 26th April 1495
The parsonage house was out of repair in the later 15th century.
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