[3] On their wedding day his father gave the bride and groom an estate in Kent.
[citation needed] In "Easter week, 1345" in Risley, Gloucestershire an inquisition determined that Henry Hussey held a moiety of Saperton manor and a moiety of Rusyndene manor in Gloucestershire, from the king by a knight's service.
According to the Patent Records in 1348 Henry Hussey (with others) was commissioned "to determine whether a wall on a river flowing near the border of Kent and Sussex, near Knellesflote, should be dismantled.
"[citation needed] Henry Hussey died on 21 July 1349 according to Complete Peerage.
He left property in Gloucestershire, Sussex, Southampton, Surrey, Kent, and Wiltshire.