Sir Thomas Parr was an English landowner and elected Member of Parliament six times between 1435 and 1459.
Background
The Parr family originally came from Parr, Lancashire. Sir Thomas"s grandfather, Sir William de Parre (died 1405), son of Sir John de Parre, lord of Parr. Married, in 1383, Elizabeth, daughter of John de Ros, and granddaughter and heiress of Sir Thomas de Ros, Baron of Kendal.
Career
He was great-grandfather of Queen Catherine Parr, the sixth wife of King Henry VIII. His father died before 6 October 1407 and when his mother remarried to John Merbury, Esq. he was made the ward of Sir Thomas Tunstall of Thurland Castle, Lancashire. Within a year of his coming of age Thomas was escheator of Cumberland and Westmorland, and was knighted about the same time. He was actively involved in local administration and law enforcement, and became very influential.
In 1435 he acted as the Under-sheriff for Thomas, 8th Baron Clifford, the hereditary sheriff of Westmorland.
He became involved in a long-running feud with Sir Henry Bellingham, another local landowner, which came to a head in 1445 when he was attacked in London by Bellingham"s men when attending Parliament, which caused a Parliamentary outcry. By the time of the War of the Roses, Parr had formed close links with leading Yorkist Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury and when hostilities began joined him at the Battle of Ludford Bridge near Ludlow in 1459.
After a Yorkists were defeated, he was forced to flee to Calais with Salisbury and was attainted in Parliament, but returned to fight at the Battle of Wakefield in 1460. He died in 1461. Anne"s descendants to this day hold the title of Earl of Pembroke among other prominent titles.
Membership
He was elected Member of Parliament for Westmorland five times (in 1435, 1449, 1450, 1455 and 1459) and once for Cumberland (1445).