Thomas Crooke (c.1545–1598) was a sixteenth-century English clergyman, who was noted for his strongly Calvinist views.
Sir George Croke, one of the High Court judges who heard the Case of Ship Money, is sometimes referred to as his cousin, but the exact connection between them is unclear.
Unlike some of his colleagues, he left no published works behind him, and does not seem to have played a leading part in the religious debates of the time.
However his strong Calvinist views were well known to the Church authorities; possibly as a precaution against any action being taken, he obtained the position of preacher to Gray's Inn, being "specially appointed" to it in 1582.
He died in 1598 and as requested in his will (a very long and detailed one) he was buried in St. Mary Woolchurch "without superstition or vanity... since it is there that a great part of my poor labours has been bestowed for many years".