Frankland’s marriage was ‘a very proper match in every respect but want of fortune’, and on his father’s death in 1784 he was reported to have been ‘left nothing’.
Frankland made no mark at Westminster. On 13 Dec. 1796 he took three weeks’ leave for private business. One minority vote is known—for Bankes’s amendment to the proposal to send the militia to Ireland to suppress rebellion, 19 June 1798. In October 1801 he made way for his more ambitious brother William. An eminent botanist, he spent £40,000 on the house built for him by James Wyatt at Thirkleby.
