No conclusive evidence of Richard Strode’s parentage has come to light, but he may have been a son of the John Strode who in 1421 and 1422 was appointed a tax collector in the county of Devon. Richard trained in the law and in 1434 was admitted to Lincoln’s Inn.
His return to the Commons aside, Strode now also began to play a modest part in local administration. In the autumn of 1439 he was appointed to a royal commission to inquire into the testamentary provisions made by Master Roger Bolter, the precentor of Exeter cathedral, and a year later he was among the prominent jurors empanelled to take the inquisition post mortem for Margaret, duchess of Clarence,
Early in 1447 Strode was returned to Parliament by the burgesses of Plympton Erle for a second time. By the time the sheriff’s indenture recording the names of the knights of the shire was sealed on 31 Jan. it was known that Parliament, which had originally been summoned to Cambridge, was instead to meet at the abbey of Bury St. Edmunds. A number of boroughs struggled to find candidates willing to travel to provincial Suffolk, and the re-election of Strode after an interval of ten years, along with the obscure carpenter Philip Sturt* and in place of men like John Selman* and John Serle alias Silverlock* (who between them had dominated the representation of the town since the early 1430s), suggests that at Plympton, likewise, willing and affordable representatives were in short supply. Nothing is known of Strode’s contribution, if any, to the deliberations of the assembly that was overshadowed by the arrest and death of the duke of Gloucester.
Within two years, events on the wider political stage were to take an even more dramatic turn. In the wake of the loss of Normandy to Charles VII the parliamentary Commons grew restless, and in early 1450 secured the dismissal and banishment of the King’s principal minister, William de la Pole, duke of Suffolk. Strode did not sit in the Parliament that brought about the duke’s fall, although he was present at the Devon shire elections at Exeter in the autumn of 1449 and set his seal to the sheriff’s indenture. Worse was to follow, as in mid 1450 parts of the country rose in open rebellion against Henry VI and his servants, but by the end of the year order had been restored. As the crisis took its course, the King’s kinsman, Richard, duke of York, had increasingly positioned himself as a figurehead for those critical of the royal court, and before long he came into open conflict with Edmund Beaufort, duke of Somerset, who had returned from France to take Suffolk’s place at the King’s side.
Strode’s lord, the earl of Devon, allied himself with York in his opposition to the court party, which included his long-standing rival, the recently ennobled Lord Bonville*, and the latter’s principal supporter at court, James Butler, the equally newly minted earl of Wiltshire. In the late summer of 1451 Devon resolved to take action and began to rally his armed retainers. In spite of a summons to appear before the King’s council, Courtenay marched his army into Somerset and by 22 Sept. had reached Taunton. In subsequent days the force continued on via Bridgwater, Glastonbury, Wells and Bath to reach the earl of Wiltshire’s manor of Lackham on the 24th. Butler had been warned of Courtenay’s approach, and had fled to the King at Coventry, so his would be assailants had to content themselves with ransacking his and his tenants’ property for several days. Bonville made use of this distraction to slip past his enemy and take possession of Taunton castle, to which the earl of Devon now laid siege. Whether or not York had been privy to his ally’s plans, he chose for the time being to posture as the upholder of the law. His arrival in Taunton brought the siege to an end, while the earl of Devon and Lord Bonville were persuaded formally to come to terms.
Early in the new year, however, York and Devon were once more on the move, this time on the duke’s initiative and with a view to challenging the court directly. In the first days of February York’s retainers were being mustered in the Welsh marches, while in the south-west the earl of Devon’s men were likewise once more in armed rebellion. On this occasion, the disturbances in Devon and Somerset were rapidly put down by Bonville, while York and Devon themselves were arrested at Blackheath on 1 Mar.
Following the dramatic events of 1452, Strode appears to have settled down to the management of his estates, and withdrew from public life. He is not known ever again to have held office, and does not appear to have taken any part in the fresh violence in the south-west sparked off by the earl of Devon in 1455. Following the death of the former chief justice of Ireland, Henry Fortescue, towards the end of the 1450s he married the lawyer’s widow, Margaret, scion of an important Exeter family. For a few years, some of the couple’s energy at least was absorbed by the settlement of the outstanding affairs of the dead judge, who had named his widow as his executrix.
Strode’s death left his son and heir, William, a minor, and his custody was fiercely disputed between two of his father’s feudal overlords, Humphrey Stafford IV*, Lord Stafford of Southwick, who had been endowed with many of the estates of the earldom of Devon by Edward IV, and John Gibbes† of Fenton.
