On the death of his father, in February 1377, the subject of this biography, who was then already of age, succeeded to a sizeable estate comprising the four principal manors of East Haddon, Sudbury in Eaton Socon, Backnoe in Thurleigh and Ragons in Maulden (Bedfordshire), together with extensive farmland and other appurtenances.
Ragon’s position as a rentier, no less than his longstanding association with the Greys made him a leading figure in the Bedfordshire community. According to his own rough estimate, he could rely upon a net income of about 40 marks p.a., although the tax assessments of 1412 (which themselves represent a considerable undervaluation of property) record that his estates produced well over £50 a year.
Ragon finally retired from public life in about 1407, having by then discharged a second term as sheriff; but, as we have already seen, he came forward a few months later to testify before the court of chivalry in support of Lord Grey, whose livery he continued to wear. He was still alive in November 1423, when he and his wife conveyed the manor of Bourn to their elder son, John, as part of a settlement made upon the latter’s marriage to Thomas Langport’s daughter, Margaret. Ragon’s death probably occurred in, or shortly before, March 1428, as it was then that his widow confirmed her brother, Thomas Wydeville, and his co-feoffees in possession of that part of the Ragon estates which had been settled upon her for life. John Ragon died soon after representing Bedfordshire in the Parliament of 1437, and since he left no issue he was succeeded by his younger brother, Thomas.
