A successful Quaker businessman, Ellis voted with Cobden and other radicals in the division lobbies, and expressed support for modest, improving legislation, although he could speak with vehemence on matters affecting his railway interests or his faith. Descended from south Yorkshire farmers, his father Joseph Ellis (1755-1810) moved to Leicestershire in 1782 to lease Sharman’s Lodge farm and by 1807 the family had added the nearby Beaumont Leys farm, which was run by John Ellis.
In the division lobbies, Ellis was a regular supporter of radical reforms, and repeatedly voted for Hume’s ‘little Charter’ of triennial parliaments, the ballot, household suffrage and more equal electoral districts, and Locke King’s motions to equalise the borough and county franchises.
He was an active member of the committees on the investments for the savings of the middle and working classes in 1850, and on the law of partnership the following year, both of which provided cautious support for limited liability. He particularly sought to draw out from witnesses the point that the current law did not favour the working classes, but he was also interested in the experience of limited liability in other countries, such as France and the United States.
Ellis retired at the 1852 general election, in favour of the members unseated in 1848, and during the remainder of the decade he sided with the moderates in the internecine disputes amongst Leicester Reformers.
