More may be added to the earlier biography.
A memoranda roll of the Exchequer, the institution in which Somer spent so much of his career, provides further evidence that he was of Kentish origin and indicates where at least some of his interests in that county lay. The roll in question contains a copy of an indenture, dated 1 Apr. 1435, by which he acknowledged receiving a rent of 40s. for lands in Hollingbourne, Leeds, Broomfield and Harrietsham in Kent from Robert Moliton and others, and in which he is identified as the kinsman and heir of George Somer of Kent.
In January 1407 Somer and the prominent London mercer, John Shadworth†, took a bond in statute staple (for no less than £1,500) from Robert Domenyk, another mercer, although in what circumstances is unknown. It was as a consequence of this security that in the following year the City’s authorities assigned various rents and holdings in London, worth some £25 p.a. and held by Domenyk in the right of his wife, to Somer and his associate.
Apart from confirming Somer’s Kentish links, Exchequer records contain references to loans he made to the Crown in the reign of Henry VI. For instance, he advanced it 100 marks in June 1423, £20 in August 1426 and a further £100 in the following November, 100 marks in December 1429, £100 in October 1430 and another 100 marks in February 1431. Furthermore, he and others of Middlesex, including Thomas Frowyk I* and Robert Warner*, jointly lent the King £94 in February 1429.
The extent of the landed estates held by the extremely wealthy Somer made him eligible for knighthood, for which honour he was distrained in 1430 but for which he was excused, free of any fine, in 1439.
In the spring of 1434 Somer was among those called to attend the great council which met between 24 Apr. and about 8 May that year, a summons providing further evidence of his importance.
Late in life, Somer disposed of his manor at Freefolk in Hampshire by selling it to John Roger I* in 1441.
At the end of March 1446 the elderly Somer conveyed his estates to a group of feoffees headed by the then chancellor of the Exchequer, Master John Somerset*, who had also succeeded him as warden of the Exchange and Mint in December 1439. The feoffees also included the King’s serjeant-at-law, Walter Moyle*, Laurence Cheyne* and his kinsman Thomas Somer. Following his death, his executors sold his estates in Grantchester and its vicinity to King’s College, Cambridge, the royal foundation which he had helped Henry VI to establish, for the considerable sum of 2,000 marks.
It was previously thought that Somer’s daughter Agnes, whom he outlived, was his only child, yet she had once had a sister, Joan, for whom her father contracted a prestigious marriage to Richard Poynings*, the eldest son and heir apparent of Robert, Lord Poynings. Joan’s short-lived marriage to Poynings ended with her death in 1420, following which she was buried in St. Helen’s priory, Bishopsgate, London. In July 1423, shortly after Poynings married again, Somer received a quitclaim from his former son-in-law and an acknowledgement of a debt of 500 marks from Lord Poynings.
