Of a family seated at Badley since the time of Henry VII, Poley was a country gentleman and a lawyer, active in the county even before succeeding his father. The Suffolk manors of Badley, Barking, Stoke Ash and Woodhall were settled on him at the time of his first marriage, a fortunate match that brought him into the circle of such prominent Suffolk families as the Seckfords and the Wingfields. However, it was through his maternal relations’ influence with Lord Burghley that Poley came to sit for three boroughs outside Suffolk. At Bodmin Burghley’s influence must have been direct; in the other two cases it would have been exerted through the duchy of Lancaster. Poley’s parliamentary career was not spectacular, even if all the following references are to him, rather than to Thomas Poole I. The variant spellings of the names and unknown identity of the latter make confusion all too likely. The only recorded speech (Pooley) was a brief intervention on a matter of privilege, 11 June 1572. The committees were on fines and recoveries, 13 Feb. 1576 (Pooley); grants by the dean and chapter of Norwich, 2 Mar. 576 (Pooley); questionable returns, 24 Feb. 1581 (Powle, Poole); and Ledbury (Herefordshire) hospital, 4 Mar. 1581 (Pooley, Powley).1Vis. Suff. 1561, ed. Metcalfe, 58; Vis. Suff. ed. Howard, i. 30; E163/14/8; C142/225/108; G. Inn Pens. Bk. i. 74, 89, 101, 112, 128; Thetford hall bk. 1568-1622, p. 129; CSP Dom. 1581-90, pp. 21, 74; HMC Hatfield, xii. 577; Trinity, Dublin, Thos. Cromwell’s jnl. f. 63; CJ, i. 105, 110, 129, 131; D’Ewes, 300, 302.
Poley died in 1613, leaving a daughter. The estates were to be managed by trustees for 15 years to pay off debts, but the widow had a life interest in Badley. There were legacies to nephews and nieces, to the servants and to the poor, and the eventual heir was a nephew Edmund whose wardship Poley had bought, and which he bequeathed to the boy himself.2PCC 107 Capell.