Of obscure parentage, Sulyard made his way in the world as a successful lawyer. Very little is known of his father but it is likely that it was the elder John Sulyard who attested the Suffolk county election to the Parliament of 1449-50 and turned out at Eye on behalf of Alice de la Pole, dowager duchess of Suffolk, nearly five years later.
By 1459 he was serving as steward at Eye for the duchess of Suffolk, for whom he was a legal counsellor in the following decade,
Typically for a lawyer, Sulyard was not exclusively identified with any one patron. It is worth noting that his second wife was the daughter of Alice de la Pole’s enemy, John Andrew of Baylham, and (Sir) John Howard*, who had quarrelled with the duchess of Suffolk in the 1450s, retained him for his counsel in the mid 1460s.
Sulyard was useful to the Crown at a local level as well. Between 1461 and his death he served as a j.p. in Suffolk and elsewhere and on numerous ad hoc commissions. Much of the work of such commissions fell on the shoulders of lawyers, although many of those on which Sulyard was placed as a serjeant-at-law and a judge were nominal appointments that he held in his capacity as an assize justice. Another important role he performed at a local level was that of an arbiter. In 1467, for example, he and William Jenney* made an award between Thomas and William Catesby†, who were quarrelling over property in Southwark;
In October 1477 Sulyard and Townshend were among nine leading lawyers selected to become serjeants-at-law, and they took up the coif on the following 9 June.
Sulyard rode the home circuit for the last time during the Lent vacation of 1488. He died on the following 18 Mar., several weeks before the beginning of the Easter law term.
Sulyard died a wealthy man, having invested heavily in land. Although he had inherited manors and other holdings at Eye and elsewhere in Suffolk from his father and a moiety of a manor at High Laver, Essex, from his mother, most of his estates were of his own creation. At his death he owned five manors, the moieties of two others and a house near Fleet Street, London. He also held four other manors in the right of his wives, two at Kimpton in Hertfordshire through his first marriage and two others, ‘Waylands’ near Ipswich and Weston in Norfolk, through his second.
Not all of Sulyard’s attempts to add to his estate had met with success. In the early 1480s, for example, he had tried but failed to acquire the Suffolk lands of his recently-deceased uncle, William Harleston. He had been with Harleston’s widow, Philippa, soon after her husband died, intending to ‘make as wise and as crafty labor as he can’, but ended up suing her and Harleston’s feoffees in Chancery. According to him, they had refused to allow him to buy the properties, even though the childless William had promised him first option of purchase after his death. Yet it appears that he had faced competition for the Harleston lands from Philippa’s nephew, Sir William Stonor†, and there is no evidence that he was able to vindicate this claim.
In his will, dated 8 Oct. 1487 and proved on the following 11 June, Sulyard sought burial in Wetherden parish church. He ordered a marble tomb and headstone and directed that no fewer than 1,000 priests, each of whom was to receive 4d., should each sing a mass for his soul within three days of his death, a grandiose but unrealistic request. He also provided for a chantry at Wetherden, to last for 80 years, where a chaplain would pray for the souls of himself and his wife, Anne, of his parents, and of several members of the Goode family, apparently his relatives. In lieu of unpaid tithes, Sulyard bequeathed the rector of Wetherden 20 of his best ewes and 20 marks for repairs to his church. He also set aside ten marks for a new window in Eye parish church to commemorate his parents and ancestors. As for his immediate family, he left plate and household ‘stuff’ to his wife and other items of plate to his sons Edward, Andrew and John, to Elizabeth, his daughter by his first wife, and to Anne and Alice, his two elder daughters by his second marriage. He assigned his ‘stuff’ in his inn next to the Whitefriars in London (presumably Serjeants’ Inn in Fleet Street) and all his law books to his sons, while directing that they should share his robes and furs with their sisters. By this date Elizabeth was the wife of John Garneys and Anne, though still below the age of majority, had married Roger Appleton†, an esquire from Kent. Alice was still in her mother’s care and Sulyard set aside 300 marks for her marriage, requesting that his wife and cousin, William Pykenham, archdeacon of Suffolk, should vet any prospective husband. As for his youngest daughter, another Elizabeth (under the age of two when he made his will), he left her £20 and declared that she should become a nun. (In the event, she ignored her father’s wishes and married the Wiltshire knight, Sir Edward Baynton.) After naming his wife, along with William Pykenham, John Clopton, John Cheke and Gregory Fylling as his executors, Sulyard gave directions for the disposal of his lands. In these he was perfectly fair to his son by his first marriage but unusually generous to his other sons, perhaps because he was particularly fond of his second wife. He left to Edward, who settled at High Layer in Essex, the properties he had inherited from his own parents, but it was Andrew who succeeded to the manors of Wetherden and Pulham Hall. To his third son, John, he left the manors of Spanbys and Stratford St. Mary.
Two years after Sulyard’s death, his widow married Sir Thomas Bourgchier, a younger son of the earl of Essex, but the marriage was extremely brief, since Sir Thomas died in 1491.
In 1643 a band of puritans desecrated the tombs of Sulyard and his grandson, Sir Edward Sulyard, also buried at Wetherden. One of the iconoclasts recorded that ‘[w]e brake a hundred superstitious pictures in Sir Edward Suliarde’s Isle, and gave orders to brake down sixty more ... There were taken up nineteen superstitious inscriptions that weighed sixty-five pounds’.
