Stanlawe was elected to the Parliament of 1447 as a servant of the Percys. He is almost certainly to be identified with the ‘Thomas Stanlawe, junior’, who on 16 Feb. 1454 was appointed by the earl of Northumberland as clerk of his Cumberland mines at a daily wage of 3d., and with the ‘Thomas Stanley’, who on 24 Nov. 1455 sued out a general pardon as ‘late of Prior Hall, gentleman, alias Stanlowe, late of Carlisle, alias Stanlawe of Keswick, alias Stanlee of Cockermouth’, a pardon perhaps necessitated by his presence in the Percy retinue at the first battle of St. Albans. His designation as ‘junior’ shows that he had an older namesake at the time of the 1447 Parliament, but his Percy connexion makes it much more likely that he rather than his namesake was the MP, particularly as the two knights of the shire for Cumberland, John Pennington* and William Martindale*, were also Percy adherents.
The Stanlawe family were of some modest standing, established since the mid-fourteenth century at Dalegarth in the south of Cumberland. Nicholas Stanlawe, who was probably the MP’s grandfather, was among those Cumberland men considered important enough to be required to take the parliamentary oath of 1434 not to maintain peace-breakers, and, in 1436, was assessed on an annual income of £8 in the county’s subsidy returns.
There is no direct evidence to connect the family with Carlisle before the election of the younger Thomas, but it is suggestive that, in 1428, the elder Thomas was a juror at the inquisition post mortem taken on the death of Elizabeth, wife of William Denton, a prominent citizen of Carlisle.
The next reference also connects Stanlawe with the city. Described as ‘once of Carlisle, gentleman’, he was among those attainted in the first Parliament of Edward IV’s reign for fighting on the Lancastrian side at the battle of Towton on 29 Mar. 1461. He did not long survive thereafter. On 25 May 1463, despite his attainder, a writ of diem clausit extremum was issued in respect of his estates in Cumberland, probably because he was a tenant of the Percys, whose lands were then in royal hands. Unfortunately, the relevant inquisition was either not taken or no longer survives.
