The Hampshire MP was the third William Ringbourne in succession to fall heir to the family estates. His grandfather, who had married Edith Rockley, a second cousin of William of Wykeham, bishop of Winchester, served the bishop as steward of the episcopal estates from 1386 until he died in 1400. By his will of 1403 Bishop Wykeham left Edith a handsome bequest of £100, and £20 to her son (our MP’s father), but although the bishop also settled on the Ringbournes an interest in tail in certain of his own manorial holdings, these were never to pass to their line (rather, descending in that of Sir Thomas Wykeham*, the bishop’s principal heir). Nevertheless, the Ringbournes remained closely involved in the affairs of Winchester College, their kinsman’s foundation, and it was probably there that young William was schooled.
The young man’s mother, Agnes, took as her second husband John Holcombe, whom she married without royal licence before 22 May 1427, and it was presumably Holcombe who pressed for a formal assignment to her of dower at Barton. This was made in July following, when she was assigned a room called ‘Presteschamber’ along with a stable, gatehouse and some 500 acres of land. Holcombe, who was to outlive his stepson, retained at least for his wife’s lifetime the Ringbourne manors of Afton and East Parley in Christchurch, which were doubtless included in Holcombe’s tax assessment on lands valued at £32 p.a. in 1436.
In the 1420s Robert Long would also have been well aware that Ringbourne was one of the heirs apparent of the substantial estates in Wiltshire and Hampshire belonging to the distinguished diplomat and former Speaker Sir William Sturmy, who had no legitimate sons. Sturmy’s heirs were his surviving daughter, Ringbourne’s mother Agnes, and John Seymour I*, the son of his late daughter Maud. In his will in March 1427 the knight left personal bequests to both his grandsons (Seymour and our MP),
Earlier in his career Ringbourne had occasionally gone to law to gain confirmation of his title to parts of his patrimony. In 1419 an action of formedon of the manor of Brixton on the Isle of Wight had been sued against his father by Thomas Wayte (a neighbour at Barton Stacey), which action was ‘compromytted’ upon certain persons, each party being bound to the other in 1,000 marks to abide their award. This award was eventually made and sealed. But after William Ringbourne senior’s death our William could not discover the whereabouts of this document, and when he found that one John Cadnan had it, the latter refused to hand it over unless Wayte’s son and heir was present. Ringbourne petitioned the chancellor to summon both men to Chancery so that the award could be unsealed and the chancellor make a ruling.
Ringbourne’s public career was unexceptional. Although he attested the indenture for the shire elections at Winchester in 1433, and was listed among those in Hampshire required to take the oath against maintenance in the following year, when elected to Parliament in 1437 he lacked experience in local government. His first royal commission was to distribute allowances on taxes granted at the end of the parliamentary session, a task followed a few months later by appointment as escheator. On 7 Dec. 1441 he was granted for life the office of riding forester in the New Forest in reversion after the death of Walter Veer*, but he never secured it as his grant was quickly superseded by another in favour of Henry Trenchard*, an esquire in the King’s household. Compensation came on 10 Mar. following, in a commitment to Ringbourne and a chaplain, John Porteland, of the keeping for seven years of the priory of St. Helens, on the Isle of Wight, which Veer had previously enjoyed. This latter grant was dated by authority of the Parliament in which Robert Long and three of his sons were sitting as Members of the Commons (for various of the Wiltshire boroughs), and it seems likely that they had been instrumental in obtaining it on Ringbourne’s behalf.
Ringbourne died on 10 Mar. 1450, and was survived by his wife and three sons, of whom the eldest, Robert, was aged about 13. Eight days later the boy’s lands and marriage were granted in wardship to Richard Danvers* and John Somerby, clerk, who at an unknown date transferred guardianship to Sir John Chalers*. Transactions regarding Figheldean had been completed without royal licence, and Ringbourne’s widow and feoffees had to pay a fine of £12 to ensure Elizabeth’s continuing possession of her jointure.
Two of the MP’s sons, both named after their father, were educated at Winchester College: the elder William from 1449 until his early death, and the younger William from 1454 until 1461, when he left ‘animo deserendi studium’. The latter succeeded to the Ringbourne estates on his brother Robert’s death in October 1485.
