Owing to the loss of Sandwich’s early fifteenth-century records, Sandys is an extremely obscure figure and it is impossible to reconstruct his career or, indeed, to identify him with absolute certainty. It is nevertheless likely that he was the Thomas Sandys who obtained a lease of a plot of land in the town’s fish market in December 1433, and the plaintiff of that name who was involved in pleadings at Westminster in Easter term 1434. If the litigant, he possessed holdings at Woodnesborough, immediately to the west of Sandwich. The suit was over arrears of rent for a messuage, dovecot and lands in that parish which the plaintiff had leased to the defendant for ten years, at four marks p.a., in 1427.
biography text
Volume
Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
209645
