The bearer of a common name in Southwark and elsewhere, this Member can be confidently identified by virtue of his prominence in Southwark, where he was one of the three alderman’s deputies; he also headed the list of ‘burgesses’ who were party to the by-election indenture of 1610.
Coxe may have been a clothworker by trade as well as a member of the Company; in 1597 he had been among those appointed by the Company to inspect cloths in and around the metropolis. In March 1604 he was appointed to a committee of the Court of Assistants of the Clothworkers’ Company instructed to assist the yeomanry in lobbying Parliament to pass a bill to prohibit the export of unfinished cloth.
It is possible that Coxe was acquainted with Shakespeare; both his daughter Mary (before 1611) and his son William* married into the family of one of the playwright’s Warwickshire friends.
