The origins of the Tingledens have not been established beyond reasonable doubt, but it is probable that they hailed from Dorset and took their name from the hamlet of Tincleton to the east of Dorchester. By the reign of Richard II the family were of some prominence in Bridport,
John the younger followed his father into the trade and in 1428 he was listed among the householders and bachelors of the craft who had not yet become liverymen. He was described as ‘with Dekyn’, suggesting that he was working for the latter as a free servant, while building up capital to open up his own business. He may indeed have taken over his master’s affairs when Deken died in late 1435 or early 1436, for it was about this time that he was admitted to the livery of his craft, paying an entry fine of 3s. 4d. Soon afterwards, in 1436-7, Tingleden presented three apprentices, and his commercial dealings (by now encompassing the spice trade with London’s Italian merchant community) were evidently successful, for in 1441-2 he was among the more substantial contributors to a levy raised by the Grocers’ wardens.
Like Deken, Tingleden conducted his business from Southwark. He joined a well-established community of London grocers in the borough, who at that time included Henry Purchase*, Nicholas Preest* and John Rokesley*, and along with Rokesley he was appointed to a jury which in 1438 inquired into the adulteration of wax in London and the suburbs.
Particularly close were Tingleden’s links with William Redstone, a fellow parishioner of St. Olave’s. Their relationship probably dated from the earlier acquaintance of Redstone’s putative father and namesake with Tingleden’s former master, Deken, alongside whom he had sat in the Parliament of 1421 (May), and was cemented by the younger Redstone’s marriage to Tingleden’s daughter Agnes, albeit only after an initial squabble over the terms of the marriage contract had been settled.
By contrast with his activity in Southwark, Tingleden played rather less of a part in the life of the city of London. He never held civic office, and his contacts were, by and large, restricted to the ranks of his Company, men such as Wotton, Thomas Knolles, Nicholas Wyfold and Richard Philip to whom, in April 1439, he made a gift of his goods and chattels in London and Southwark.
It is not clear whether by Tingleden’s day the family had already come into possession of the manor of Frenches in Reigate which they held by the early sixteenth century.
Richard went on to represent Southwark in the Commons in 1467, and still resided in the borough at the time of his death in 1497.
