Remington’s grandfather bought the Garrowby estate in the East Riding in 1547.
Remington was probably brought to the notice of the earl of Northampton, the lord warden of the Cinque Ports, by the Irish peer Lord Clanricarde, who had married Essex’s widow and settled on her property in West Kent. A connection with an ‘arch-Papist’ like Clanricarde, however, was an electoral disadvantage in the Cinque Ports, and his nomination at New Romney was initially rejected, and only grudgingly accorded as an act of courtesy to the lord warden.
Remington attended the fourth session of Parliament, in which, together with Humphrey May and John Brace, he examined complaints against the Council in the Marches from the four English border counties (26 Mar. 1610). He was also among those appointed to consider a bill to allow female heirs to be named in entails (16 April).
A member of the Irish Society, Remington bought ‘a strong castle’ and 2,000 acres in Donegal in the spring of 1610.
