A native of Dunwich, where he was a resident of All Saints’ parish, Robert was the son of a local burgess and former MP, whom he appears to have succeeded by 1427. At that date he was in possession of the lands, tenements, heath and pasture previously held by Hugh Thorpe, for which he paid the corporation of Dunwich a substantial annual rent of 27s. 1½d.
Thorpe began office-holding at Dunwich during a period of administrative reform for the borough. Having completed a double term as a bailiff, he was one of the 18 men elected on 17 Dec. 1419 ‘to rule and to do justice to the town’ with the then holders of that office. This body replaced the 24 who had formerly constituted the borough council, probably as part of an attempt to reinvigorate local government.
Thorpe’s later years are less easy to chart. Either he had a younger namesake, perhaps his son, or he lived to a very ripe old age. A Dunwich estreat roll for 1441-2 shows that the properties for which he had paid a rent of just over 27s. p.a. in 1427 were by then in the possession of Reynold Rous*,
