Thomas was the great-grandson of Robert Tauk† (d.1401), who had represented Sussex in 1391.
The Tauk family had long been connected with the Lords St. John, their feudal overlords at Westhampnett, and Robert was present when Thomas Poynings, Lord St. John, made his will at Halnaker in 1428.
Thomas attained his majority before Trinity term 1445, when he brought a suit in the court of common pleas against Roger Bradbridge for wasting his inheritance. Four years later he entered further pleas against men from west Sussex. His coming of age was also marked by appointment as escheator later in 1449, and he attested his first parliamentary election at the shire court in Chichester in February 1453.
The Sussex returns to Edward IV’s first Parliament, which assembled on 4 Nov. 1461, do not survive, but a suit brought two years later in the Exchequer of pleas shows that Tauk was re-elected alongside John Wood III*, a much more prominent figure who had served with him on the commission appointed in March. The two men reported that they had been elected in the shire court on 21 Oct., and a writ for payment of their wages at the customary rate of 2s. a day each for the 49 days of the session and four days spent travelling to and from Westminster had been sent to the sheriff Walter Denys on 7 May 1462. Denys had failed to pay them. After considerable delay, the barons eventually awarded Tauk £15 12s. in the summer of 1467.
During the 1470s a member of Tauk’s family fell into disgrace. This was Agnes Tauk, perhaps the MP’s sister, who was prioress of the Benedictine nunnery at Easebourne. On 23 May 1478 the new bishop of Chichester, Edward Story, having heard unfavourable reports about standards of behaviour at the priory, and in order that the correction of abuses might cause the least public scandal and offence to her kinsmen, held a meeting in his palace chapel preliminary to making a formal visitation. In Thomas Tauk’s presence, an instrument was drawn up providing for the resignation of Agnes’s authority should the bishop so demand. Story’s findings when he visited the priory two months later were damning. Not only was it discovered that two of the nuns had absconded with men, but the prioress herself was reported to have given birth to one or two children in her youth, and her relations were said to pay visits to the priory for weeks at a time, where they feasted on the best food, leaving the worst for the nuns.
When appointed to a royal commission in May 1484, Tauk was called ‘the elder’; and he was similarly styled in a general pardon granted to him by Richard III on the following 30 Dec. His son William also sued out a pardon at that time. The fact that two other members of the family found favour with Henry VII strongly suggests that the Tauks supported Henry at the time of his triumph at Bosworth. As early in the reign as February 1486 Thomas Tauk ‘the younger’, with his older namesake standing surety for him, obtained the farm of land in Bosham near their home, while even earlier Edward Tauk, perhaps another son of our MP, was granted the office of bailiff of the lordship of Warblington, Hampshire, and keeping of the park there during the minority of the duke of Clarence’s heir. Edward married the widow of the former Exchequer official Thomas Pound*, and died early in 1493, that is shortly before the MP,
