It is possible that this MP originated from Great Wilbraham, some seven miles east of Cambridge. During the early 1440s, a William Tomays of that parish was caught up in an episode that appears to have arisen from the rivalry between two local magnates, John, Lord Tiptoft†, and Sir James Butler, afterwards earl of Wiltshire and Ormond. On 22 Feb. 1441, a group of j.p.s. headed by Sir Nicholas Styuecle* took an indictment for murder against Henry Brokesby, a resident of Butler’s manor of Fulbourn and from a family closely connected with the Butlers. Brokesby countered with litigation in the common pleas, claiming that the indictment arose out of a conspiracy at Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, between Tiptoft, Styuecle, Everard Digby* and many others, including William Tomays of Great Wilbraham, ‘yeoman’, the previous November.
If, however, the subject of this biography was another William Tomays, his election to the Parliament of 1449 is the first definite evidence for him. In the following year, the MP began action at Westminster against two yeomen from Boxworth, Cambridgeshire, and another from Suffolk over alleged debts, suing as ‘of Cambridge’ rather than Great Wilbraham.
