In comparison with the careers of his grandfather John and his father Robert, Richard’s was singularly lacking in distinction, and despite his marriage into one of the leading gentry families of Somerset and Wiltshire he was not considered to be of sufficient standing to take up knighthood. This was partly because he did not become the head of his family until his father died in 1465, and before that date his personal income was comparatively modest. The Warres were affluent: our MP’s grandfather, John Warre (d.1443) of Hestercombe, held estates in Somerset and Dorset estimated in 1412 to be worth as much as £76 p.a. for the purposes of taxation, and to these were subsequently added the manors of Burlescomb in Devon and Pitton in Wiltshire – the latter acquired through John’s marriage to Joan Maubanke (d.1439).
Although a descendant of one chief justice and related by marriage to another, Sir John Juyn, c.j.KB,
Thus, at the time of his election for Wiltshire to the Parliament of November 1449, Warre was still young (probably not yet 25), and lacking any experience of royal administration, and although he may have taken possession of the family manor of Pitton he is not known to have then held any other lands in the county he represented. Nor can his holdings in Dorset and Devon have provided him with an income of much substance, and his father still possessed the bulk of the family estates in Somerset and elsewhere.
In the meantime, in 1452-3, Warre had himself served a term as sheriff, but not of Wiltshire. As sheriff of Somerset and Dorset he was responsible for conducting the parliamentary elections at Ilchester and Dorchester in February 1453, and it may be reasonably conjectured that he played a significant part in the returns of his wife’s cousin John Carent* and of his own cousin’s husband John Sydenham*.
In the will Warre’s father made on 7 July 1465, the day before he died, Richard and his mother were named as executors.
In the 1470s Warre took a close interest in the chantry in the parish church of St. Mary Magdalene in Taunton founded by his kinsman John Bishop, where prayers were to be said for Bishop Waynflete of Winchester and the souls of Cardinal Beaufort and members of the founder’s family, including Warre’s father and grandfather. Warre was among those, headed by the precentor of Wells cathedral, who were to hold the properties intended for the endowment in trust after Bishop’s death.
Warre died on 25 Nov. 1482. A number of writs de diem clausit extremum were issued to escheators in the four counties where he had possessed land, but inquisitions were not held until nearly a year later, and then only in Devon and Somerset. The jurors testified that as he had died childless his heir was his kinsman and namesake Richard Warre of Chipley in Somerset, a minor aged 15. Their grandfathers had been brothers.
