Richard was probably brought up in the royal court, where his father Walter Strickland held the post of master of the King’s harriers. At the age of 11 he was granted the office jointly with his father, the two being awarded it for term of their lives in survivorship.
Other problems, resulting from the peculiar marital history of Richard’s mother, were not so easily resolved. His legitimacy, and that of his half-sister Katherine, daughter of Philip Boteler of London, had been put in serious doubt, since the papal curia had twice confirmed the judgement of ecclesiastical courts in England that in her youth their mother Isabel had been contracted in marriage to one John Godyn of London, before she married Boteler. The siblings petitioned the Pope to reverse this ruling, and in August 1447 the bishop of London and the abbots of St. Mary Graces and Bermondsey were instructed to test the validity of their claim to have been born in lawful wedlock.
It would seem that very soon after Walter Stickland’s death these had been bought from Stanley and Stokdale by Thomas Thorpe, the ambitious and influential Exchequer official, and in the autumn of 1446 Thorpe assisted Richard in bringing an action to contest the King’s right to the wardship. Thorpe made good use of his position as treasurer’s remembrancer to obtain a warrant formally instructing his fellow officials to examine inquisitions post mortem dating back to Edward III’s reign which related to Strickland’s inheritance.
Strickland’s brief career benefited from his father-in-law’s position at the Exchequer. Still under age, on 22 May 1450 he was granted with Richard Tunstall† a lease for ten years of a number of properties in Lancashire, which, however, he relinquished less than a year later.
Little of note is recorded of Strickland after the dissolution of his only known Parliament, save that he brought a bill in the Exchequer court in 1456 against a former sheriff of Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire for failing to pay his wages as master of the harriers.
Claims to the London property were revived much later by Walter Strickland, the grandson and heir of Walter II, who asserted in his petition to the chancellor that Richard had been a ‘natural fool’ throughout his life, and had been gulled by his father-in-law into making settlements of his inherited lands in favour of his wife, Thorpe’s daughter.
