Sage was from one of Scarborough’s principal families. Three successive William Sages represented the town in at least five Parliaments between 1388 and 1421, and our MP was the son and heir of the last of these. On his father’s death in 1429, he must have been no more than a boy. He first appears in the will, made on 24 Sept. 1429 (only days after his father’s death), of his maternal grandfather, Thomas Rightwise, who bequeathed him 6s. 8d., but no more is known of him until 1447-8 when he was admitted to the freedom of the city of York. His family appear to have long had interests in the city, for our MP’s putative grandfather, William Sage†, was one of the chamberlains there in the 1390s. Thomas, however, made his long career in Scarborough.
That career of nearly 50 years is, unfortunately, only documented rarely. In 1449 Thomas sued his kinsman John Sage for detinue of charters, implying a property dispute within the family. Later, in 1458, along with John Daniell*, he was named to a commission of inquiry concerning a ship of Rouen, illegally seized by pirates employed by Thomas, Lord Roos, and brought to Scarborough.
There is nothing to show that Sage played any part in the civil war of 1459-61. His sympathies presumably lay with the Yorkists, although, on 12 May 1462, he took the precaution of suing out a general pardon (describing himself as ‘of Scarborough, gentleman, alias merchant’) from the new regime. Interestingly, too, he appears to have had some business interests in common with Lambert: in 1462 the two men together sued five local fishermen for a total of £25. He was also, briefly at least, in contention with Robinson, who in the following year he sued for £40.
Soon after, however, Sage found a new way to get into trouble. On 3 Dec. 1474 a commission of inquiry was issued in respect of a significant act of piracy. Sixty men in three large vessels, called ‘fysshers’ and belonging to our MP, allegedly seized off Scarborough a Hanse ship, ‘le Christofre’ of Stralsund, took their prize to Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and there disposed of the ship, its gear worth 100 marks and its cargo, valued at a further £200. This was contrary to the truce concluded with the Hanseatic League in the previous February as part of Edward IV’s diplomatic preparations for the invasion of France, and Sage’s offence was seemingly a serious one. The commissioners were ordered to arrest him and bring him before the King and council.
The last part of Sage’s career is poorly documented, but ironically it may be the period when he was of the most importance. He augmented his wealth by marrying the widow of a merchant of Kingston-upon-Hull, Robert Alcock, the brother of John Alcock, bishop of Worcester, a marriage that probably took place soon after her first husband’s death in the summer of 1484.
After 1485 Sage, despite his advanced age, continued to play a prominent part on the town’s affairs. He enjoyed the unique distinction of serving as mayor under the terms of Richard III’s charter, soon revoked by Henry VII, and also held office as coroner.
Sage must have been an old man when he made his will on 20 Feb. 1497.
A later Chancery suit gives a slightly different account of Sage’s will. In about 1510 Scawsby brought a petition before the chancellor, not as supervisor but rather as one of the will’s executors. He identified as the will’s supervisors two altogether greater men, the brothers Sir Marmaduke Constable† (whom he said to have had the custody of Sage’s two daughters) and the serjeant-at-law, Robert Constable. This represented a curious conflation with Katherine’s will, which had named Scawsby as executor and the serjeant as supervisor. Equally puzzling is the reference to Sir Marmaduke, who is named in the probate version of neither will. It is, however, not intrinsically unlikely that Sage, as one of the leading men of Scarborough, should have had close links with the Constables, who lived at Flamborough on the Yorkshire coast a few miles to the south of the town, and had considerable shipping interests.
Sage’s death brought his family to an end in the male line. His property descended to his daughters, Elizabeth, who married Walter Cawood of Thorpe in Balne near Doncaster, and Margaret who married one Thomas Bradshaw.
