Constituency Dates
Truro 1413 (May)
Southampton 1417, 1419, 1420, 1427, 1429, 1431, 1432, 1433, 1435, 1442
Family and Education
2nd s. of Thomas Chamberlain alias Lorimer of Grampound, Cornw. by his w. Joan Stephen;1 In 1428 William conveyed to his brother, Robert Chamberlain esquire, all his holdings in Grampound which had lately belonged to John Stephen his uncle: Add. Ch. 13047. uncle or cousin of Thomas*. m. (1) by Aug. 1421, Margery (d. 8 Sept. 1432), wid. of Henry Keswick (d.1420) of Hinton Daubney, Hants, 1s. d.v.p. 1da.; (2) c. Mar. 1438, Jane, wid. of Robert Perry and gdda. of Richard Cavendish. Dist. 1430, 1439.
Offices Held

Attestor, parlty. elections, Hants 1427, 1431, 1432, 1437, 1442.

Commr. Hants Feb. 1422 – Nov. 1444; of gaol delivery, Southampton Nov. 1439 (q.), Winchester castle Nov. 1442.2 C66/445, m. 19d; 455, m. 35d.

Recorder, Southampton prob. by 1428–?d.3 He was still receiving a fee and livery as recorder in July 1442: Southampton City Archs., steward’s bk. SC5/1/6, f. 7.

J.p.q. Hants 28 Oct. 1439 – d.

Parlty. proxy for the abbot of Hyde 1439.4 SC10/49/2434.

Address
Main residence: Southampton.
biography text

More can be added to the earlier biography.5 The Commons 1386-1421, ii. 513-14. Besides acting as an attorney on behalf of clients, Chamberlain brought suits in the court of common pleas on his own account. For example, in 1422 he sued William Overey* together with a carpenter and a mason for forced entry into his house in Southampton and theft of timber worth £10; in the Michaelmas term of 1435 (when up at Westminster for his tenth Parliament) he appeared in court in person to bring pleas against a butcher from Petersfield, two husbandmen from Totton and others including a goldsmith, for debts amounting to over £34; and he was again a plaintiff four years later.6 CP40/647, rot. 94; 699, rots. 288, 601; 715, rots. 359d, 620d. That his first wife was indeed the widow of Henry Keswick is made clear from a suit she and her fellow executor of Keswick’s will brought in the common pleas in 1426.7 CP40/661, rot. 97.

Chamberlain was among the lawyers whom the warden and fellows of Winchester College paid for their counsel: he received an annual fee of one mark from 1429 until the year before his death.8 T.F. Kirby, Annals of Winchester, 189; N. and Q. ser. 12, i. 361-3. He was still recorder of Southampton when returned to his last Parliament in 1442. His parliamentary wages on that as on other occasions were 2s. a day, which amounted to £6 16s. for 68 days’ service, but this was not paid until 21 July, nearly four months after his return home.9 Southampton steward’s bk., SC5/1/6, f. 7. His status as a landowner gave him armigerous rank and a substantial income, so it is not surprising that he was twice distrained for refusing to take up knighthood.

Author
Notes
  • 1. In 1428 William conveyed to his brother, Robert Chamberlain esquire, all his holdings in Grampound which had lately belonged to John Stephen his uncle: Add. Ch. 13047.
  • 2. C66/445, m. 19d; 455, m. 35d.
  • 3. He was still receiving a fee and livery as recorder in July 1442: Southampton City Archs., steward’s bk. SC5/1/6, f. 7.
  • 4. SC10/49/2434.
  • 5. The Commons 1386-1421, ii. 513-14.
  • 6. CP40/647, rot. 94; 699, rots. 288, 601; 715, rots. 359d, 620d.
  • 7. CP40/661, rot. 97.
  • 8. T.F. Kirby, Annals of Winchester, 189; N. and Q. ser. 12, i. 361-3.
  • 9. Southampton steward’s bk., SC5/1/6, f. 7.