Since this MP lived in Hampshire for at least part of his career he may have been related to John Stargrave, who had been appointed tronager and pesager in Southampton in Henry IV’s reign, and owned land in East Woodhay which later became known as the manor of ‘Stargraves’.
Whether Stargrave was indeed arrested, and what happened to him two months later when Edward IV seized the throne remains uncertain. The petition already mentioned – addressed to the new King’s chancellor, George Neville, bishop of Exeter – alleged that Stargrave had used his ‘power’ as a retainer of Henry VI to unlawfully enter land belonging to the Cricklade family of Andover and required the tenant, Richard Curteys, to hand over the rent of £5 p.a. Furthermore, he had sued Curteys for debt in the court of the mayor and bailiffs of Winchester when he refused to comply, and through his ‘mesnes et alliaunce’ looked likely to prevent him from leaving prison.
It is difficult to find an explanation for Stargrave’s return to the Parliament summoned for 3 June 1467 as a representative of Steyning, the Sussex borough adjacent to Bramber, although his motive for seeking election may have been to gain the parliamentary privilege of freedom from arrest. The threat to his liberty now came from powerful enemies. On 26 Sept., during the recess, he was the object of a second commission of arrest, this time headed by (Sir) John Lisle II* and the sheriff of Hampshire and once more including John Roger, who was Lisle’s son-in-law. The commissioners were instructed to bring him to Chancery with a number of other men from Winchester, including as before members of the Nutkyn family. In the commission Stargrave was described as a ‘hosteler’, so it would appear that since his expulsion from the Household he had made a living as an innkeeper.
