The son of a prominent Bristol burgess who outlived him, Sharp is not always easy to distinguish from his father and namesake, since he was not consistently styled ‘junior’ or ‘the younger’ in contemporary records. Although he predeceased his father, he was still a figure of some standing in his own right, not least as an MP in three consecutive Parliaments. Like the elder John Sharp, he was a substantial merchant and of sufficient status for contemporaries sometimes to refer to him as a ‘gentleman’.
The first definite reference to Sharp is his appointment in 1442 as one of the bailiffs of Bristol. He is not known to have held any other municipal office although later he was nominated but not chosen for the shrievalty of the town. Within four years of completing his first term as bailiff, he was returned to the Parliament of 1447. His fellow MP in this and his other Parliaments was the recorder of Bristol, Thomas Young II*, a distinguished local merchant and lawyer. Given that their fellow burgesses returned them together on three occasions, he and Young must have worked well enough with each other, in spite of previous differences between Thomas and Sharp’s father that had led to law suits in the Chancery and Exchequer.
Nearly two years later, in the summer of 1452, the Crown directed Sharp to support the expedition that John Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury, was preparing to lead to France, by commissioning him to contribute, fully crewed, the Marie of Bristol or two smaller ships to that enterprise. Unless any ‘reasonable impediment’ intervened, the vessel or vessels were not to leave Talbot’s service without licence from the earl or the Crown until Sharp’s retainer (of unknown duration) expired. Sharp himself was not obliged to participate in the expedition in person since he was permitted to appoint deputies in his stead.
In January 1453, Sharp was associated with his father, the lawyer John Kemys* and Thomas Exeter, the former steward of Bristol, in an agreement that also involved the Gloucestershire esquire Hugh Mille* and his wife Margaret. The details of this agreement have not survived but probably it arose from a Chancery suit that, at about this time, the Milles brought against the elder Sharp, Kemys and Exeter, who were Margaret’s former guardians.
Still alive in September 1454 when nominated for the shrievalty of Bristol, along with the man who was pricked, his uncle Philip Meede, and Thomas Rogers,
