A Norman family in origin, the Pomeroys were granted Tregony manor soon after the Conquest, and dominated the town for the next five centuries, obtaining its first charter, and constructing a castle, church and priory. By the mid-sixteenth century, however, these structures were all decaying, and the family itself was in similar decline.
Pomeroy lived in Tregony itself, where in 1599 his estate was valued for subsidy purposes at £4, one of the town’s highest assessments.
Pomeroy served as mayor of Tregony in 1620. When the borough was incorporated in 1621 he was named as the senior capital burgess, which empowered him to act as a town magistrate. He died intestate, probably towards the end of 1624, since administration of his estate, estimated for probate purposes at £1,000, was granted to his widow on 18 Jan. 1625. On the death of his childless son and heir in 1674, the Cornish branch of the family was extinguished, its remaining property passing to a distant cousin, Roger Pomeroy†.
