A merchant,
At Colchester Trewe may have lived in Stockwell Street where he owned a house, although he also possessed properties (including two meat stalls) in other parts of the borough, and at Lexden within its liberty.
Trewe drew up his will on 12 May 1445 and probably died not long afterwards. He requested burial in the parish church of St. Martin in Colchester, to which he left 40s. for its high altar and 20s. for its fabric. He also bequeathed 3s. 4d. to St. Paul’s in London, perhaps in recognition of the part that the City had played in his business affairs. For the further good of his soul, Trewe arranged for a chaplain to sing masses in St. Martin’s for ten years and left sums to the Franciscan friary in Colchester and the poor of a local hospital. He provided for his wife, Isabel, by awarding her all his household goods and awarding her an estate for life in his holdings in Colchester and elsewhere in Essex. When he made his will, Trewe was owed £70 in debts (including £30 by Gilbert Debenham I*) and he bequeathed these to his younger son Robert, for whom he also reserved certain rents in the Colchester parish of St. Peter. John, his elder son, would succeed to the rest of his estate after Isabel’s death. Trewe appointed three executors, his son John, wife Isabel and William Saxe*, and in June 1448 they went to the borough court to have the will enrolled.
