Thorpe first appears in the records on 20 Feb. 1447, when he acted with his father in the purchase of a tenement called ‘Le Belle super le Hoop’ in Great Ilford (Essex), one of a series of acquisitions the family made in that county. Two years later, on 29 Jan. 1449, father and son were joined in another context, the Crown appointing them, in survivorship, as porters of the castle of Newcastle-upon-Tyne at a daily fee of 2s.
Roger had some small reward for his service in Parliament. On 29 Apr. 1453, four days into the second session, he was formally reappointed to the portership of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, to hold office as though it had not been resumed by the Act of Resumption of three years earlier. This enabled him and his father, who was joined with his son in this grant on the following 17 May, to sue the sheriffs of Northumberland for wages during the period of suspension.
For the remainder of the decade Roger’s career followed the ups and downs of that of his father. No more is known of him until the autumn of 1456 when the duke’s fortunes were in decline and his father’s consequently in the ascendant. By that date he numbered among the four henchmen of the Crown, and on 27 Oct. 1456 he was granted during pleasure the office of tronager and pesager in the port of Berwick-on-Tweed, a sinecure his father had held in the early 1440s.
To these years of prosperity is, perhaps, to be assigned Roger’s marriage to Constance, the daughter of an Essex knight. This marriage cannot be accurately dated – indeed, there is no certain evidence of it until as late as 1488 – yet it is very unlikely to have taken place while Roger was out of favour under Yorkist rule nor, if his son Ralph (of age by 1497 at the latest) was also Constance’s, can it have been made after 1485. The other possibility, and perhaps the stronger one, is that the match was contracted during the Readeption. What can be inferred about the bride’s age is consistent with a match either in the late 1450s or about 1470. She had a brother born in about 1449, but, since her father had been born in about 1401, this brother may have been only her half-brother and she many years his senior.
Given his father’s place in the increasingly militant Lancastrian regime of the late 1440s, it was natural that Roger should have taken an active role in the civil war of 1459-61. Towards the end of 1459 he sailed in the expedition, commanded by Henry Beaufort, duke of Somerset, sent to take Calais out of the hands of the earl of Warwick, and he was thus probably present when the duke was defeated at Newnham Bridge in the following April. Returning with Beaufort in October 1460, he went on to fight at the battle of Wakefield on 30 Dec. 1460, a Lancastrian victory that briefly promised to mark a decisive defeat for the cause of the house of York. Unusually an account survives, albeit a highly ex parte one, of the part he took in the battle. According to later complaints made by Thomas Colt, he took advantage of the carnage for an act of personal revenge. The two men were at odds over the imprisonment of our MP’s father during the second prorogation of the Parliament of 1453-4 (in which Colt, like the Thorpes, was an MP), and, in revenge, Roger is alleged to have sought out Colt and assaulted him. The complaint, when it was made in the court of King’s bench early in the new reign, was couched in the conventional legal language of such petitions, only the numbers it cites were a departure from the norm: Colt presented a bill, asserting that, on the day before the battle, his adversary had vi et armis collected 20,000 malefactors arrayed in warlike manner and lay in wait to murder him at Wakefield, where he beat and wounded him. Clearly this was not a literal description of events, although there is no reason to doubt a personal clash. Colt added to our MP’s legal discomfiture by adding another charge in his guise as the administrator of the duke of York, who had died in the battle. He claimed that, again in the day before the battle, Thorpe and another Lancastrian, Nicholas Rigby, had plundered from the duke goods worth £5,000, cash to the value of £1,000, and horses worth £200.
In view of his undoubted presence at the battle, and his apparently prominent role there, it is surprising that Roger escaped attainder in the first Parliament of Edward IV’s reign. Yet the change of regime still proved ruinous for him. His father’s murder at the hands of the London mob in February 1461 had left him heir to the family estates, but in the following July a commission was issued for the seizure of his manor of Barnwell. Nor did he escape the unfavourable notice of the Commons who assembled in November: they presented a petition naming him, described as ‘late of London, esquire’, as one of seven men (among whom was Rigby), ‘who, as it is said and alleged, have offended against the royal majesty, crown and dignity’ of the new King and ‘not yet submitted to his good grace’. They asked that proclamation be made for the appearance of the seven in the court of King’s bench on the octaves of Purification ‘to submit themselves’ to the King’s grace and ‘become his liegemen and subjects’, non-appearance to result in attainder and forfeiture.
Thorpe was in prison in the Marshalsea when Colt brought the bills against him, and, on his own later testimony, he remained in that prison or another until he had made this surrender to Colt. The date of the surrender is unknown, although it must have been before August 1467, when Colt died.
The Readeption should have brought a further improvement in Thorpe’s situation, and it is thus surprising that the only reference to him during this brief period is his suit concerning Barnwell (although, as remarked earlier, it may have witnessed his marriage). In any event, if Henry VI’s restoration had held out any new hopes to him, these were quickly dashed. During Edward IV’s second reign, he played no part in local affairs, and what little can be discovered about him suggests that he was in straightened financial circumstances. On 9 Dec. 1478, described as ‘of Barnwell, esquire’, he entered into a statute staple at Westminster in the sum of £12 to Thomas Luyt*, a long-standing filacer of King’s bench; and in the following March he entered into another of the same in the sum of £9 8s. to John Beauchamp, a London draper. Neither statute was discharged.
Thorpe probably saw in the end of Yorkist rule the means of escape from his life as an impoverished and marginalized gentleman. To this end, he presented a petition to the Commons of the first Parliament of Henry VII’s reign detailing his own and his father’s tribulations at the hands of their nemesis, Thomas Colt, and asking for the reversal of the judgement Colt had obtained against him in 1462 and for the revocation of the conveyances he had been forced into making thereafter. The petition was successful, but the days of his prosperity were too far behind him to admit of any real restoration of fortune. Indeed, he did not even succeed in regaining the lands he had alienated to Colt. On 22 Nov. 1493 he released and quitclaimed the manor of Clayhall to Colt’s son, John Colt, presumably in return for some undocumented financial consideration.
Thorpe did not long survive the sale of Barnwell and the effective liquidation of the estate his ill-fated father had built up. He was probably dead by 1 Feb. 1497 when his son, Ralph, avowing before witnesses that he was of full age, made a release to the purchaser. All that remained to the family of Thomas’s purchases for Ralph to inherit was the Essex manor of Cranbrook in Ilford. The family did not survive in the male line long into the sixteenth century, by the middle of which the common-law heir to Cranbrook was Richard Page, great-grandson of our MP’s sister, Beatrice (the widow of Richard Strickland*).
