The Culpeppers were a Kentish family of some antiquity, having been established at Brenchley and Bayhall in Pembury since the early thirteenth century, and founding branches elsewhere in the county. Some confusion about the identity of Richard, the parliamentary candidate of 1455, might remain, owing to the existence of contemporary namesakes,
It may have been Culpepper’s status as one of Buckingham’s servants that led him to become embroiled in the disputed Kentish election of 1455. In the aftermath of the duke of York’s seizure of power following the battle at St. Albans, the King’s council wrote to the sheriff of Kent, Sir John Cheyne II*, warning him that there were plans by some elements within the county to interfere in the electoral procedure. He was ordered to observe the statutes concerning parliamentary elections and report any malefactors to the council.
Culpepper’s lord Duke Humphrey of Buckingham fell at Northampton in 1460, but he himself went on to enjoy a long and active career in the public affairs of Kent under the Yorkists. He was granted an annuity of £10 by Edward IV in November 1463,
In the last year of his life Culpepper, like other members of his family, may have joined the conspiracy against Richard III led by Henry, duke of Buckingham, his feudal overlord. If so, he was fortunate to escape attainder in the Parliament assembled in January 1484, and be able to secure a royal pardon in the following March.
Owing to the forfeiture of the duke of Buckingham’s estates, the wardship and marriage of Culpepper’s heir reverted to the Crown, and were granted to one of King Richard’s favoured servants, Sir John Savage the younger, on the following 18 May.
