References to this MP are few. He may have been a descendant of John Stringer, a juror at the Leicester portmoot of Michaelmas 1378, but, if the family had been established in the town before the fifteenth century, it had played no very prominent part in its affairs. William was similarly obscure, being one of the few representatives of the town during the Lancastrian period not recorded as holding office there. He was active by Trinity term 1428 when, described as ‘of Leicester, yeoman’, he was sued for taking a female servant from her master before she had completed her term of service. In the receiver’s account for the honour of Leicester for the accounting year Michaelmas 1437-8, he is recorded as having been paid 14d. for timber used to repair the pillory in the Saturday Market.
biography text
Volume
Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
209821
