Henry Frowick (died 1459) was an English businessman, landowner, administrator and politician who was five times elected as Member of the Parliament of England for the City of London and twice chosen as the City's Lord Mayor.
[1][2] A member of the Frowick family that had been prominent in the City of London for 200 years, he was born after 1377 as the son of Henry Frowick (died 1386), lord of the manor of Old Fold at South Mimms in Middlesex, and his wife Alice Cornwall (died 1416), daughter and heiress of John Cornwall.
In 1427 he served as Sheriff and from 1429 sat on all royal commissions for the City together with some for Middlesex.
In 1444 he was chosen for a second term as Lord Mayor and, when elected a fourth time as MP in 1447 for the Parliament to be held at Bury St Edmunds, announced that he would only attend if allotted adequate accommodation.
After a fifth term as MP in 1450, he made his will in April 1459, asking to be buried in the church of the Hospital of St Thomas of Acre, and was dead by March 1460 when it was proved.