Skargill came from Yorkshire, but to which of the families of this name he belonged is unclear, since although he referred in his will to lands he held in the county he failed to specify their location. Perhaps he was related to the Skargills of Thorpe and Stapleton, who in the early fifteenth century were headed by the influential William Skargill, sometime escheator of the county. In 1429 William stood surety for the earl of Northumberland and other custodians of the estates of the late earl of March. Using the income from six of his manors, he founded a chantry at Whitkirk in the West Riding, by licence of 1448, and he also leased substantial lands at Templenewsam.
Whatever his relationship to these Skargills, it would appear that Thomas was a younger son, dependent for his income on his membership of the royal household, and like many of his fellows benefiting from the lavish generosity of the young King Henry VI. Although there is no firm evidence that he crossed the Channel in 1430 for Henry’s coronation as king of France, by October 1435 he had been made one of the yeomen of the chamber, as such being assigned livery at the great wardrobe and wages of 6d. a day from the revenues of his native Yorkshire. Skargill was promised these wages for life, and other posts were granted him on a similar basis: the keepership of the royal park at Havering in Essex, along with the dues of herbage and pannage, worth £8 p.a.,
When not attending to his duties at Court, Skargill lived in Essex, and he was appointed escheator of the county when the incumbent James Gresacre died in 1445 (even though the queen had asked the treasurer to appoint one of her own servants, so he might do her ‘good service in the said occupacion’).
Skargill was again in breach of the statutes regarding the residential qualifications for MPs at his second election to Parliament, early in 1449 (this time being returned by the Dorset borough of Bridport), for when he attested the Essex elections to the same Parliament (held at Chelmsford on 21 Jan.), he was stated to be living in that county. The four men from Bridport who ostensibly stood surety for the appearance of him and his fellow MP John Burgess II* may have been simply acting for the latter, who was a local man.
Skargill’s third consecutive Parliament, which met in November the same year, saw him representing Westbury, another Wiltshire borough, which was then electing MPs for only the second time in its history. There is no reason to doubt that he was a placeman yet again. Furthermore, he was a late replacement, for on the return his name appears written over an erasure.
The summer of 1453 proved to be a time of personal tragedy and financial insecurity for Skargill. First, in the early evening of 8 July his brother Robert was violently assaulted in the London parish of St. Anne, near Aldersgate, by Thomas Dawne, another yeoman of the Crown, and died of his injuries. Although Skargill, as Robert’s heir, appealed Dawne for homicide, the defendant was granted bail in October (on sureties provided by Sir John Boteler* of Lancashire), and eventually restored to his position at Court.
Skargill was placed on the Essex bench for the middle years of the decade, but it was in the neighbouring county of Suffolk, at the shire court at Ipswich on 12 Nov. 1459, that he attested the elections for the Coventry Parliament. The two men elected, (Sir) Philip Wentworth* and William Tyrell I*, were both members of the Household, and Tyrell is thought to have been Skargill’s brother-in-law.
The 1460s proved a difficult period for Skargill. At some point before the spring of 1464 he was bound in recognizances for £80 to keep the peace towards a London fuller named Symkyn Brigeman, but his disruptive behaviour in the presence of the ‘chief juge’ resulted in the forfeiture of his bond.
Skargill had been party to deeds concerning property at Havering in the 1450s,
