More may be added to the earlier biography.
It has been suggested that this Dorset attorney sometimes lived at Berry Pomeroy on the outskirts of Totnes in Devon.
No additional information has been found to confirm that the MP was related to other Tracys who represented Bridport (John Tracy†, who sat in ten Parliaments of the late fourteenth century and Nicholas Tracy† who did so in 1402), or to William Tracy of Bridport, who was dismissed as a coroner of Dorset in 1429 as being too sick and aged to perform his duties.
More, too, has been discovered about Tracy’s activities elsewhere in Dorset. In January 1426 he served as a juror at the post mortem held at Hooke for Edmund Mortimer, earl of March, and seven years later he testified at the proof of age of Walter, son and heir of William Payn† (d.1426) of East Lulworth (the stepfather of the prominent landowner John Newburgh I*), stating that he had been present at Walter’s baptism in 1413.
Tracy’s final recorded appearance in the central courts occurred in Trinity term 1450,
If he was the man with interests at Berry Pomeray, he left a son named Thomas (fl.1470).
