The Drax family owed its position in Dorset to a series of successions through the female line. Henry Drax’s father inherited Ellerton Abbey from his maternal uncle, a wealthy Barbados sugar planter. Drax himself married his first cousin, the heiress of the Erle and Ernle families, acquiring thereby an electoral interest at Wareham, which he represented for most of his parliamentary career. Returned as a Whig at a by-election there in 1718, when his wife’s grandfather, Gen. Thomas Erle, vacated his seat, he voted against the repeal of the Occasional Conformity and Schism Acts and the peerage bill in 1719. In 1720 he was one of the Members who were credited with £1,000 stock at 260 by the South Sea Company without paying for it. He did not stand for Wareham at the next two general elections, when his father-in-law, Sir Edward Ernle, took the family seat. Returned for Lyme Regis in 1727, he voted with the Government on the Hessians in 1730, but thereafter with the Opposition until Walpole’s fall. For the 1734 and 1741 elections he compromised at Wareham with John Pitt, whose family also held an interest there. Appointed to the stewardship of the Prince of Wales’s Dorset manors in 1737, he became ‘a great favourite’ with the Prince, replacing George Lyttelton in 1744 as Frederick’s secretary, though according to Horace Walpole he could not write his own name.
biography text
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Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
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