It is possible that Sharp was originally from Powick, Worcestershire, for John Sharp of Powick was party to at least two conveyances of property at Worcester in 1416.
In April 1430 Thomas Swyney*, the other MP for Worcester in 1426, conveyed lands at Kempsey to Sharp and the clerk, William Hawkes. Fourteen years later, Sharp transferred his interest in the lands to Roger Gower, rector of All Saints, and another clerk, John Baker. In March 1446 Gower and Baker conveyed them to John Langeston, who immediately afterwards received a quitclaim from Sharp, probably acting as a feoffee on Swyney’s behalf.
The litigation arising from Sharp’s suit proved extremely protracted since Charlecote, evidently the principal defendant, was subsequently outlawed for not answering in court. He finally appeared at Westminster in Easter term 1439. Upon doing so, he was obliged also to answer the King, since he stood accused of forgery, a breach of statute law. In the following term he pleaded not guilty and the matter was referred for trial at the assizes held at Worcester in the spring of 1440. In the event, he failed to appear at the assizes, the jury found him guilty in his absence and Sharp was awarded a total of 60s. in damages, costs and expenses. This was not the end of the matter, for Charlecote was subsequently outlawed again for having not paid his opponent 40s. of this money, a sum still outstanding a decade and a half later. He also endured a long period of imprisonment for forgery and it was on account of this confinement that he was fined just 6s. 8d. when he compounded with the Crown in May 1455. The court also pardoned him the 40s. he owed Sharp, probably because the latter was no longer alive.
Whenever he died, Sharp is certainly not heard of after the mid 1440s. A Roger Sharp attested the election of the knights of the shire for Worcestershire to the Parliament of 1478 but his connexion, if any, with the onetime MP for Worcester is not known.
