Breres was born at Preston, Lancashire. He probably belonged to a junior branch of a local gentry family, since he appears to have been a cousin of Edmund Breres*.
By the start of James I’s reign Breres was the senior member of the Great Council, with many years’ experience of handling the city’s business in London. On 8 Feb. 1604, 12 days before he and John Rogerson were elected to the forthcoming Parliament, both men were granted a lease of the tithes of Coventry’s two principal parishes, but it is unclear whether this decision was in any way linked to their new status as the city’s representatives at Westminster.
Breres’s prominence in Coventry was reflected in the spring of 1605 by his receipt of a Privy Seal demanding £20. However, he ultimately paid only half that amount, as the Great Council assigned the residue to other residents. Whether he was present at the outset of the second parliamentary session is unclear. On 9 Mar. 1606 he and Rogerson were admitted as honorary members of Gray’s Inn, but it is not known how or why this was arranged. Three days later Breres was granted leave to depart from the Commons, and his wages were suspended between 22 Mar. and 27 April. On his return to the House, he received one committee nomination, to consider a bill for the relief of skinners (2 May). In total he was paid £23 15s. for the 1606 phase of this session, at the same daily rate as before.
Breres made one recorded speech during the third session, on 11 May 1607, when he objected to a proviso in a bill about woollen cloth manufacture. Two of his legislative appointments related to issues with which he had been linked previously, alehouses, and the leather trade (9 and 13 December). The remainder of his committees concerned grants to corporations, free trade, logwood and legal costs (21 and 26 Nov. 1606; 15-16 May 1607). For the period before Christmas 1606, he received wages at the higher daily rate of 6s. 8d., totalling £11. He was paid another £14 up to Easter 1607, but his final reimbursement is not known.
Around early 1609 Breres again travelled to London on the city’s behalf, this time seeking to confirm the titles of some properties belonging to two of Coventry’s principal charities. When the bill for this exercise rose to £200, the Great Council asked Breres to contribute £40, on the grounds that he stood to benefit personally as a lessee of the disputed lands. Breres then protested that he had received no allowance for his own expenses during the case, and secured a small payment towards these in October, but he was probably obliged to meet the Council’s demand.
Coventry by this time was considerably less prosperous than it had been in the early sixteenth century, and in April 1609 Breres signed a letter from the city to the Privy Council, rejecting the government’s request for an increase in local subsidy assessments.
Breres made at least one more official trip to London, accompanying Henry Sewall* in 1612, in which year he also served as master of the Drapers’ Company for the last time. An active member of the Great Council almost until his death, he presented his colleagues in October 1618 with ‘a fair salt cloth embroidered with gold’, decorated with gold buttons and tassels.
