Henry Clerke was an English lawyer and politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1621 and 1626.
[1] He was elected member of parliament for Rochester in 1621 until 1622 under the reign of King James I.
He was re-elected MP for Rochester in 1625 for both parliaments in that year under King Charles I.
[3] In 1637, Clerke was made a serjeant-at law and some time before 1642, he acquired the manor of Ulcomb from Sir William St Leger.
[1] As Clerke supported King Charles in the Civil War, Restoration House was sequestered and used by Colonel Gibbon as a headquarters in southeast England.