Coke’s father, the renowned judge and parliamentarian Sir Edward Coke, was high steward of the borough of Chipping Wycombe, and as such was undoubtedly responsible for Coke’s election there in 1624. That said, Coke was presumably already well known locally, having been living eight miles away in a farmhouse on his father’s Stoke Poges estate.
Henry Coke was re-elected in 1625. By that date John Coke had been knighted, so it is possible to state with certainty that this Member played no recorded part in the Commons’ proceedings. Returned for Chipping Wycombe for a third time the following year, Coke was joined by his fiery brother Clement. As he was excused attendance on 5 Apr. on the grounds that he was lying sick in the country, most of the references to ‘Mr. Coke’ in this Parliament must therefore refer to his brother. However, this Member probably received at least one committee appointment, as two men with his surname were named on 11 Feb. to consider the Charterhouse hospital bill, which measure Coke’s father piloted through the Commons in 1628.
By October 1626 Coke was living at Thorington in Suffolk, the manor which his father had bought in 1593 and settled on him in 1620.
