The Hungerfords had acquired Stock by 1431, and further purchases of estates ensured that the family became one of the more substantial in the area bordering north Wiltshire, Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire.
Hungerford’s father had once been a militia captain charged with searching for recusants, but he nevertheless married into a Catholic family.
The Hungerford family had often previously represented Great Bedwyn in Parliament, and shared the patronage of the borough with the Seymour earls of Hertford, who owned the manor. Having sat as the borough’s senior Member in the last two Elizabethan parliaments, Hungerford was returned again in 1604; however, he was obliged to take the second seat, giving precedence to the 1st earl of Hertford’s nominee, Sir John Rodney. Hungerford’s contribution to debates is obscured by the fact that the Commons Journal does not usually differentiate between him and his kinsman, John Hungerford*, who sat for Chippenham. He may have been nominated to committees for bills to prohibit the residence of married men in colleges (14 June 1604), confirm letters patent (5 July), suppress the use of logwood and endow poor churches (15 May 1607), as well as measures concerned with Damerham (4 July 1610) and contractors (5 July).
Hungerford spent the last decade of his life at Black Bourton, while his brother, Sir John, helped manage his estates.
Hungerford died at Black Bourton on 27 June 1627, four days after making his will. He was sufficiently prosperous to provide for his sons’ education, three of whom were still minors, while setting aside 4,000 marks for two of his daughters’ marriage portions. Bequests were made to the poor of several parishes, including £10 to support two apprentices in Great Bedwyn and £5 to ‘the ploughboy whom I brought out of Wiltshire with me’. The advowson of Corsham church was given to his children’s schoolmaster. He instructed the latter to raise his children according to the tenets of the Church of England, ‘which I constantly believe to be the same that Christ and his apostles planted in the Primitive Church’.
