By 1640 a 17 year old Thomas Grey was in a world where tensions were growing rapidly on a national scale.
Thomas Grey, 2nd Marquess of Dorset was entombed in the church in 1530.
Forget old Thomas Grey musing in the churchyard.
It was named by Thomas de Grey, 6th Baron Walsingham in 1891.
Thomas Grey, chronicler, whose surname is often spelled 'Gray'
In 1492, Dorset was required to give guarantees of loyalty to the crown and to make the young Thomas Grey a ward of the king.
Thomas Grey, a 14th-century English knight, listed several "Norman" families which took up land during William's reign.
According to the entomologist Thomas de Grey (1843-1919), the larvae of this species may occasionally be found in the horns of living animals.
The second, written by Thomas Grey, a professor of law, was introduced later that year.
Later, while tutoring in Paris, he was suddenly dismissed by the guardian of Thomas Grey.