Sir Samuel Sandys (28 December 1560 – 18 August 1623) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1586 and 1622.
He was admitted to Merchant Taylors' School in April 1571, with his younger brothers Edwin and Miles (all three later became MPs).
[2] Although he initially lived in Essex, where his mother held land – his eldest son was baptised at Woodham Ferrers in 1591 – he settled at Ombersley thereafter, purchased the manor of Wickhamford, Worcestershire in 1594, and purchased the manor of Ombersley from the Crown for £2,000 in 1614.
[3] Father and son, and their wives, are cast in alabaster effigy in their funerary monument in Wickhamford church.
They had four sons and seven daughters:[5][6] ^A Collins[6] states wrongly that Elizabeth married secondly George Walsh.