A family which held the hereditary position of naperer at royal coronations, the Torells had owned lands in Essex since the twelfth century or earlier.
Thomas took delivery of his inheritance in September 1417, a year after reaching his majority.
During his early adulthood Thomas saw military service in France. In May 1421 he agreed to serve Henry V there for six months with two men-at-arms and six mounted archers.
Although he had served a term as sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire in the later 1420s, Torell did not serve on an ad hoc commission before the mid 1430s, and he became a j.p. only after his last Parliament. Personal affairs loomed large in his later years, for his wife appointed him her executor before she died in 1437. Following her death, he was also active as the administrator of the goods and chattels of her previous husband: presumably these had passed into his hands because Katherine had been the executrix or administrator of Sir Henry Noon. In this period he may also still have been active as the executor of John Lancaster*, who had held lands in the vicinity of the Noon manor at Shelfanger, even though Lancaster had died as long ago as 1424.
Torell himself died on 11 Mar. 1443,
