THOMAS TUCHET, son and heir, appeared in 1205 as a tenant of the Earl of Chester and was in control of Ashwell in 1209. He was a Commissioner to survey the forest in Derbyshire in 1219, a collector of the fifteenth in cos. Nottingham and Derby in 1225, a justice of novel disseisin and jail delivery in the same counties in 1227, 1228 and 1229, and a Commissioner of array in co. Derby in 1230. About 1218 he presented to the living of Ashwell church, he made a gift of lands to Wombridge Priory, Salop, 1215-24, and was in litigation with the Abbot of Burton in 1224 and 1226. He appears in 1221, as lord of Lee Gomery, Salop, which he probably inherited from his mother Pernel. He married Elizabeth and died before 2 January 1234/5. Elizabeth was living in 1245, when she presented to Ashwell church, and she was probably still living in September 1248. [Complete Peerage XII/2:55-6, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]