The Staces were a large family long-established at Hythe. The MP’s putative father, John Stace, served as a jurat there and it is probable that the subject of this biography was one of three sons who played an active role in local government.
The earliest known reference to Thomas is a suit for debt that he brought against another townsman in the bailiff of Hythe’s court in June 1437.
On 25 Feb. 1453 Stace was elected to his first Parliament, alongside Thomas Honywood*. It seems likely that his election had been planned as soon as news of the impending Parliament was received, for he had not been chosen as a jurat on the previous 2 Feb., perhaps in anticipation of a long absence on parliamentary business. He travelled to Reading, the venue for the first session, via London, arriving there on 3 Mar. 1453, three days before the Parliament opened. He departed for the second session at Westminster on 24 Apr., the day before its opening. Both he and Honywood travelled frequently between Hythe and Westminster during this session. Stace returned to Hythe on 22 May and left again two days later, setting off again on the 16th for Westminster, where he remained for two weeks. Back at Westminster for the closure of the second session on 2 July, he returned to Hythe four days later. Unlike Honywood, he appears not to have attended the brief third session at Reading, although he did depart for the final session at Westminster on 8 Feb. 1454. He returned to Hythe on the 22nd of the same month, before leaving for Westminster again on the 29th. There he remained there until 24 Mar., when he went back to Hythe once more, although he was present at Westminster for the dissolution on 18 Apr.
On 31 Mar. 1465 Stace was re-elected bailiff of Hythe on the unexpected death of Henry Locke. If an unusual choice – given that he was not then a jurat – his nomination further reflected his local status. While he was bailiff, he and three other townsmen attended the coronation of Elizabeth Wydeville at Westminster.
Later that year, Stace advanced money towards the journey that the warden of the Cinque Ports, Richard Neville, earl of Warwick, and his ally, George, duke of Clarence, made to the north to join up with Richard of Redesdale’s rebels. The Ports also supported Neville and the Readeption government of Henry VI in 1470-1, and Stace and other leading Portsmen made loans towards the costs of escorting Queen Margaret back to England from her exile in France, in his case 20s. Furthermore, he spent 5s. on the ‘journey to Blackheath’, almost certainly a reference to his presence in the Bastard of Fauconberg’s army which camped on the heath after its repulse from London in May 1471. Following Edward IV’s recovery of the Crown, the Cinque Ports suffered a suspension of their liberties, and Stace and his fellow Portsmen worked hard to rehabilitate themselves with the Yorkist King. He spent 3s. 4d. at Canterbury when representatives of the Ports met Edward in June, and he contributed a further 31s. 8d. to a communal fine, paid to Lord Dynham and Sir John Fogg† at Ashford and Folkestone.
Notwithstanding his ill-judged support of the Readeption, on 1 Sept. 1472 Stace gained election to the Parliament of 1472-5 as the senior parliamentary baron for Hythe. Twenty days later, he was at Maidstone to attest the return to the same assembly of John Isle† and Sir Henry Ferrers† as the knights of the shire for Kent. Stace departed for the Parliament with his fellow baron, Robert a Dawne†, on 4 Oct., two days before its opening, only to come home again after 13 days.
In his will of 26 Jan. that year,
With regard to his real property, Stace left most of his interests in Hythe (including his principal tenement there), Saltwood and ‘Pedling’ to his wife, Katherine; after she died they were to be divided between his two youngest sons with remainder to their elder brother. To his eldest son, he assigned a tenement at Hythe which he had purchased from the executors of Thomas Heghested and property in West Hythe. John was not, however, to receive the West Hythe lands until six years after his father’s death or until he got married. Should he die before either condition was met, they were to pass to his younger brothers. If he did succeed to them, John was to pay each of his brothers 20d. p.a. for a period of ten years after the MP’s death. Stace also left John all his fishing equipment, upon a similar condition that he provided for his brothers in cash. Finally, the testator instructed his executors to make estate to Thomas Brownyng of a property in Postling that he had by the enfeoffment of one of Brownyng’s kinsmen. After the witnesses had signed the will, Stace added one more bequest of £10 13s. 4d. to his widow. He died immediately after making it, for probate was granted at Canterbury the following day. The executors then returned to Hythe and made their final account for Stace’s maltolts, receiving a final payment in discharge the debts due to him for the various services he had rendered to the town.
Katherine Stace did not long outlive the MP. She made her own will on 1 June 1474, seeking burial beside her late husband and leaving small bequests for the high altar and fabric of St. Leonard’s and for ten obits. She also left money for lamps to be lit in the chapel of that parish’s fraternity of the Blessed Mary, which she had joined in 1472. Her final provision for her soul was her assignment of 33s. 4d. for a chaplain to celebrate masses for four years. The remainder of her will was concerned with the division of her goods and chattels among her three unmarried daughters and two youngest sons. She appointed these sons, Richard and Nicholas, and Richard Bernes of Hythe as her executors, and they received a grant of probate on the following 15 Feb.
