This MP may have been the John Kimberley who was bailiff for Elizabeth, Lady Grey of Wilton, at Shirrington, Essex, from Michaelmas 1401 until her death on 10 Jan. 1402.
Kimberley is first mentioned in the Colchester records in 1402, and he subsequently discharged many of the borough offices. In April 1406 he was accused with Henry Boss in the local courts of buying a cargo of fish from the proprietor of a ship in the port of Colchester and then selling it in portions at a profit. In July he was pardoned his outlawry for not appearing in the courts at Westminster when sued for debt by Robert Brunham, the merchant of Bishop’s Lynn. In his official capacity he brought a plea in Colchester borough court in 1407 for £3 owed to the royal customs. For several years he owned a tavern in Colchester and in 1422 he obtained the lease of a vacant plot of crown land in the town. With his first wife he received a papal indult in 1423 granting them the right to receive plenary remission at death; and, with his second, in 1426 he secured possession of a tenement in St. Nicholas’s parish, formerly held by John Ford III and William Nottingham.
Kimberley attended the Essex shire elections held at Stratford in 1411 and at Chelmsford in 1429.
