Sir Edward Leech (or Leche; 1572–1652) was an English lawyer and politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1614 and 1625.
Biography
In 1614, Leche was elected Member of Parliament for Lostwithiel.[1] He was elected Member of Parliament for Derby in 1621.[2] He was of Cheshire when he was knighted by King James at Windsor on 9 September 1621[3] and about this time became Master in Chancery. He was re-elected MP for Derby in 1624 and in 1625.[2] He owned property in Derbyshire at Chatsworth,[4]Shipley Hall and Belper.[5][6]
Leech died in Drury Lane, London, 1652, at the age of about 80.[7]
Great-grandfather of Edward Leche was John V Jankin de Leche of Carden (1403-1492 or 1422-1485), Esq., Deputy Sheriff of Chester (1464), who owned moorlands in Carden, Clutton and Aldersy as the vassal of lords Stanley, earl of Chester. The Leech family is descended from a certain Jоhn Leche «Irlonde», the surgeon of Edward III.
In 1377, John "Irlonde" Leche was granted a patent on the possession of the castle Warin (Warden) in Kildare in Ireland, and in 1386 the moorlands near Stretton, Farndon and Coddington by Edward III.