Bellingham’s father, Edward, whose half-brother was returned for Lewes in 1572, lived in the parish of Newtimber in Lewes Rape and was a long serving Sussex magistrate. Bishop William Barlow described Edward in 1564 as a ‘misliker of religion and godly proceedings’, but he apparently subsequently reconciled himself to the Reformation, despite one of his daughters being recorded as a recusant in the 1630s.
Bellingham was bequeathed £100 in his father’s will, proved in February 1590.
Bellingham was probably the ‘honest servant’ to whom the 2nd earl of Dorset bequeathed £50 in 1609, although he had several namesakes, related or unrelated, including his uncle, an Elizabethan sea captain.
Bellingham was returned to the third Caroline Parliament for Chichester. He made no recorded speeches and was named to only one committee, on 14 Apr., to consider a bill to lessen the penalties of excommunication, but he evidently paid careful attention to the proceedings of the House:
Bellingham drew up his will on 22 Sept. 1637 and was buried five days later, according to his request, in Chichester cathedral, where his mother had been interred. He gave £5 towards the cathedral’s repair, and £5 to be distributed to the poor of the city parish of St. Peter the Great at his funeral. For his niece Mary Bellingham he provided a portion of £300 out of his lands in Surrey, and he desired his nephew William Muschamp* to purchase plate ‘that may remain to the house in memory of me’ out of money due from two Cambridgeshire debtors. The residuary legatee was a namesake, his nephew and godson. No later member of this branch of the family sat in Parliament.
