Wingfield’s uncle, the 1st Lord Burghley, was responsible both for his education and his appointment as feodary of Lincolnshire. His first wife brought him a comfortable estate in Rutland, which he increased by purchase.
Wingfield contributed £5 to the Benevolence raised after the dissolution of the 1614 Parliament.
Wingfield was elected to his third and final Parliament in the last year of his life, when Sir George Manners*, who could no longer secure election at Grantham, presumably because of his Catholic connections, probably gave his interest to the 2nd earl of Exeter (William Cecil†) in return for a seat at Stamford in the next election for his stepson (Sir) Edward Baeshe*. Wingfield left no trace on the records of the second Caroline Parliament, and died six weeks after the dissolution, being buried at Tickencote on 29 July 1626. In his will, dated 26 Apr. 1626, he left £20 as a stock to discharge all duties payable to the parish church by the local cottagers. Portions totalling £4,535 were provided for his younger children. His heir survived him by only five years, but his grandson Francis represented Stamford in the Convention as a strong supporter of the Restoration.
