By c.1530 John Hynde had married Ursula Curson,[5][6] (daughter of Sir John Curson of Beck Hall, in Billingford and Bylaugh, Norfolk,[7]) and in 1534 he oversaw the marriage settlement for his sister Margaret Hynde to George, a son of Sir William and Dame Jane Turville of Aston Flamville, Leicestershire.
In December 1540 he received a commission from the Privy Council to inquire into charges of sedition alleged against Thomas Goodrich, Bishop of Ely for having participated in translating a work by Philip Melanchthon.
[10] In 1539 he was granted (as a result of the Dissolution of the Monasteries) the property later known as Anglesey Abbey,[11] together with the whole of its estate at Bottisham which he had previously held on lease.
VIII (1542–43), c. 24, was passed to confirm to him and his heirs the 'Shire manor' of Burlewas or Burdeleys in Cambridgeshire and lands at Madingley, subject to an annual charge for the payment of the knights of the shire.
[13] In addition to this property it appears, from grants in the Augmentation office, that he received portions of the church lands at Girton and Moor Barns in Madingley.