Thomas Sandys (or Sands or Sandes; 1600–1658) was an English politician, MP for Gatton.
Sandys was born in 1600, the elder son of John Sandys of Leatherhead, Surrey.[1] He was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, matriculating in 1617, aged 17. He became a barrister-at-law at the Middle Temple in 1625, and a bencher in 1648.
In the Long Parliament elected in 1640, Sandys was elected MP for Gatton along with Sir Samuel Owfield[1] (who died in 1644 and was replaced by his son William Owfield in 1645). A rival candidate for Sandys' seat was returned by the Copley family,[1] a Mr. Sanders, who was declared not duly elected on 5 November 1641.[2]
Although Sandys supported Parliament against the King,[1] both he and William Owfield were secluded from Parliament in Pride's Purge in 1648.[3]
Sandys played no part in politics during the ascendancy of Oliver Cromwell, and died at the end of 1658.[1]
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. William Cobbett. 1807. Cobbett's Parliamentary History of England. 2. 620. 21 October 2019.