Tamworth was almost certainly a member of the Sussex family of that name, and probably the younger brother of John, sometime mayor of Winchelsea and bailiff of Hastings. Like his putative brother, he claimed exemption – as a Portsman of Winchelsea – from parliamentary taxation in the hundreds of Gostrow, Guestling and Staple, Sussex, from 1409.
Before the end of September 1426, Archbishop Chichele appointed his servant, Nicholas Brockhill*, bailiff of Hythe. Brockhill held the bailiff’s court in Hythe on the 30th of that month, where he was received by the Portsmen and swore to uphold their liberties, but by 5 Oct. he had appointed Tamworth as his deputy.
Despite his duties in Hythe, Tamworth maintained his connexions with Sussex. In July 1432, described as ‘late of Winchelsea, merchant’, he was pardoned his outlawry in the county for not answering the parson of Guestling and another man for a debt of £2 13s. 4d.
