The heir to his manors in Kent was his only daughter, Juliana (d.1417), whose second husband was Thomas St. Leger, a younger son of Sir Ralph St.
[1] He was buried at the chapel of Holy Trinity at St. Dunstan-in -the-East.
The church was largely destroyed in the Second World War and the ruins are now a public garden.
He was controller of customs for London from 1375 to 1377 and JP for Kent from 1394 until his death.
This article about a 14th-century member of the parliament of England is a stub.