It is not always easy to distinguish Tracy, the fourth member of his family in as many generations to share the same Christian name, from his grandfather and father. The latter sat as a knight of the shire for Gloucestershire in the Parliament of 1419 and served a term as escheator for that county soon after leaving the Commons, but it appears he held no other offices during a career remarkable only for its lack of distinction. Perhaps he owed his obscurity to the longevity of his own father, the MP’s grandfather, whom he may have survived by no more than a few years.
Upon succeeding his father in 1440, Tracy paid homage to Humphrey, earl of Stafford and subsequently duke of Buckingham, the feudal overlord of his Gloucestershire manor of Doynton.
The date of the marriage is unrecorded although it had certainly occurred before the spring of 1446 when the Papal Curia granted the couple an indult permitting them to keep a portable altar.
One of the Pauncefoots’ associates was John, Lord Beauchamp of Powick, whose niece Margaret Swynford married Thomas Pauncefoot.
There is no evidence that Tracy held any office in local government before becoming an MP. While in Parliament, he may have taken a particular interest in (and perhaps helped to promote) a petition presented to the Commons of 1442 in the name of the ‘commons’ of Herefordshire, Gloucestershire, Shropshire, Somerset, Cheshire and Bristol. This complained about the abduction and holding to ransom of people and property from the first three of those counties by the Welsh, who had engaged in such activity for years, in defiance of legislation passed in the Parliament of 1401. To counteract the problem, the petitioners sought an ordinance making any Welshman who committed such outrages over the next six years guilty of high treason, a request to which the King acceded.
Following a subsequent term as sheriff in 1450-1, Tracy was sued in separate Exchequer suits by Henry Percy, Lord Poynings, warden of the east march, and John Merston, treasurer of the King’s chamber. In their suits, both men alleged that he had failed to pay them the sums the Crown had assigned to them from the issues of his bailiwick. Percy sought £50 from him by means of a bill of February 1452 and Merston £28, through another bill of the following May. In response to Percy, Tracy obtained licence to negotiate with his opponent out of court. The suit was still pending in the middle of the following year when, by writ of error, it was referred to the chancellor and treasurer sitting in ‘le Counsell Chambre’ next to the Exchequer. Whether the matter was ever formally resolved is open to question, for an identical writ was issued in June 1454. Merston’s suit certainly reached a conclusion, although not in favour of Tracy, who was ordered to pay his opponent the sum demanded and a further £1 in costs and damages at the beginning of 1453.
Earlier in the same decade, Tracy was drawn into a quarrel between his uncle and aunt of the half-blood, John and Margery Tracy, over a moiety of a manor at Coughton, Warwickshire, which had been part of the inheritance of their late mother Alice (the MP’s step-grandmother). In 1449 John Tracy had agreed to surrender the moiety to Alice’s sister and coheir, Eleanor, and to Eleanor’s son Thomas Throckmorton*, in exchange for lands in Worcestershire. Unfortunately for him, Margery and her husband Thomas Mille* had refused to release her interest in the property, of which Alice had made the MP a feoffee before her death in 1441. At some stage in the first half of the 1450s, John took action against the Milles in Chancery. According to his bill, William and another of Alice’s feoffees, Lord Sudeley, were on his side, having declared their willingness to release it to him. He must have won the quarrel in the end, for the Throckmortons were to take possession of the moiety in question.
A likely cause of concern for Tracy later that decade were the activities of his sons Henry and Richard, both of whom had reached their majorities by that date.
Still alive in December that year, Tracy probably died not long afterwards. Neither a will nor an inquisition post mortem for him has survived but, having served continuously as a j.p. for Gloucestershire since his first appointment to that office in 1448, he was omitted from the commission of the peace of December 1460 and nothing more is heard of him. His son and heir Henry was in turn succeeded by his own son, another William Tracy, in 1501.
