"In 1338 a pardon with fine of 100s was given to Thomas de Morle for acquiring the manor of Beddington from Thomas Corbet son of the younger Thomas without royal license, and in 1345 Richard de Wylughby and Elizabeth his wife had to pay another 100s fine for entering on the manor without license on purchase from Thomas de Brayton, the king's clerk, to whom Thomas de Morle had transferred it. Richard de Wylughby acquired a mill in Beddington from Walter de Kenele in 1347. In 1352 Richard and Elizabeth had license to lease the manor for life to Nicholas Carew, who, according to the pedigree of the Carew family formerly preserved at Beddington and printed by Manning and Bray, married their daughter Lucy widow of Thomas Huscarl.
After Richard's death Elizabeth in 1363 conveyed the manor in fee to Nicholas Carew, patron of the church of Beddington, who in 1373 was granted free warren in his manor of Beddington and died seized of it in 1390 leaving a son Nicholas." 1