Of Sussex origins, Scras was a kinsman of the Scrases of Winchelsea and he had family connexions with Preston, a parish near that Sussex Cinque Port.
For his first Parliament, Scras was returned alongside the town’s bailiff, Geoffrey Godelok*. Surprisingly, given that the Parliament of February 1449 was the latter’s sixth (and second as a representative for Romney), Scras seems to have frequented this assembly more than his fellow MP: the wages he received (amounting to £4 17s.) covered his time at the sessions at Westminster and Winchester although the payments made to Godelok were for his sitting at the latter venue only.
By the early 1450s Scras was firmly established within the governing elite of Romney. It is likely that he served as a jurat every year from 1449 until his death, as the only gaps in his cursus honorum are those for years in which the compiler of the accounts failed to record the names of the jurats and for 1456-7, for which there is no extant account.
In September 1460 Scras was elected to his third Parliament. He travelled to Westminster with John Chenew*, with whom he had recently been appointed keeper of the town’s new common house. Afterwards, Chenew received parliamentary wages of £3 14s., but Scras was paid only £2 6s. for 46 days’ service.
During 1462-3, Scras returned to Canterbury and visited Folkestone, as a member of a delegation of Romney burgesses that had meetings with Sir John Scott†, controller of Edward IV’s household and the leading member of the Yorkist affinity in Kent.
In May 1467 Scras was re-elected to the Commons, this time alongside John Chenew†, the son of his former associate in the Parliament of 1460-1. When the election returns were certified at Dover castle, he and Chenew were among those Portsmen who submitted a petition to the warden there, probably in connexion with the disputes in which Romney was then embroiled with the burgesses of Calais, the sheriff of Kent and the abbot of St. Augustine’s, Canterbury. For the Parliament, Scras received wages for 25 days at Westminster, five fewer than his colleague; and for riding to the second session at Reading – a somewhat fruitless journey given that Parliament was immediately prorogued upon reopening there – he and Chenew were each allowed costs of only 5s. 4d.
In the spring of 1470 Scras and other Portsmen took part in discussions with Sir John Guildford, the deputy of the then warden of the Cinque Ports, Richard Neville, earl of Warwick, at Dover castle. He returned to Dover in June that year as a member of a delegation deputed to meet Edward IV, who was carrying out a personal inspection of the defences of that Port and Sandwich. Yet it is likely that he, like his fellow barons and Sir John Guildford supported Warwick against the Yorkist King during the Readeption. At some point in the winter of 1470-1, he and Thomas Couper took part in discussions at London about the Ports’ charter of liberties with the ‘lieutenant’ (possibly meaning Guildford) and members of the restored Henry VI’s Council. These negotiations may have coincided with their attendance at the Readeption Parliament, which opened at Westminster on 26 Nov. 1470.
On 20 Aug. 1472, however, Scras was pardoned as ‘of New Romney, merchant alias yeoman’,
While Scras’s pardon of 1472 described him as a ‘merchant’ there is little evidence of his business activities. He did, however, trade in wine and was frequently listed among the vintners licensed to sell that commodity within Romney. On at least one occasion near the end of his life, he entertained his fellow jurats and the bailiff of Romney at his house with wine from his own cellars.
In his will of 17 Mar. 1474 Scras requested burial in the parish church of St. Nicholas at Romney and left sums to its high altar, fabric and lamps. The will provides evidence of his Sussex connexions, for he left a missal to the parish church of Preston in that county and asked for an honest priest to sing there for his soul and those of his kindred (‘parentum meorum’). To each of his two ‘daughters’ Scras bequeathed the miserly sum of 12d., but it is possible that they were his wife’s issue by a previous marriage. Other beneficiaries of the will included his brother Richard Scras and Richard’s children, the son of Henry Scras of Winchelsea, the widow and sons of the elder John Chenew (his former associate in the Parliament of 1460), his sister Isabel, his niece Alice and his nephew, another Richard Scras. To the last named Scras left a silver cup known as ‘James Lowys’s cup’: presumably it had once belonged to the late James Lowys* of Romney, but it is not known how it had come to pass to the testator. Scras provided for his wife, Joan, by leaving her his household goods and assigning to her his holdings at Romney, Stonebridge and Hope for life, after which they were to be disposed of for the benefit of his soul. He appointed two executors, Joan and his brother Richard, and died before 19 Apr. 1474.
After his death, Scras’s real property was the subject of litigation in Chancery. First, his widow, who had married John Hunt†, a Southwark grocer, sued her co-executor for refusing to allow her possession of the holdings that her late husband had assigned to her in his will. Later, probably between 1486 and 1493, the younger Richard Scras brought a bill against Ralph Dowell, alleging that the latter and his late wife, Agnes, had withheld deeds relating to lands in Romney, Hope and Lydd which he claimed as the MP’s nephew and heir.
