Charles Frederick was an eminent antiquary, a scholar, artist, and civil servant, rather than a politician. He collected early French coins which he engraved ‘in 36 quarto plates’;
In 1754 he was put up for Queenborough ‘where the fleet and the Ordnance have great influence ... and therefore their dependants want to nominate [the Members]’.
In the reshuffle of offices, December 1762-January 1763, Shelburne, who wanted the surveyor-ship of the Ordnance for Barré, suggested that Frederick should be made receiver general of the customs.
He retained the character of a civil servant, even in the House—his very few recorded interventions in debate were all on technical matters concerning his department. Two letters from Frederick to Lord Townshend,
He talks ignorantly though he is a voter; for he must know I can have no interest there, but from the support of the master general.
This time the borough was contested, Piercy Brett, the Admiralty Member in the previous Parliament, having been dropped, and now standing against the official candidates. A month after the election, 8 Nov., Frederick wrote to Townshend:
All under your Lordship (except two or three) behaved with uncommon firmness and disinterestedness ... The dissolution of the Parliament was so very secret and sudden, and my election being four days after the dissolution, I had not time to apply to you for your commands. Sir Walter Rawlinson who was chose with me, was the person sent by Lord North and Lord Sandwich, and who I never saw till an hour before we got into a post chaise for Queenborough; it is to the master general’s interest I owe my seat, and therefore return your Lordship my sincere thanks for permitting me to be chose there.
In 1779 the Public Ledger wrote about Frederick: ‘A superannuated placeman. He just continues to crawl to the House, to keep a debate out, and give his vote.’ This he did with great regularity. But he was too ill to attend the crucial divisions of February 1782; his physician told Sandwich that going out would kill him—‘you will however see’, wrote Sandwich to Robinson, 16 Feb. 1782, ‘that he is very hearty in our cause, and that therefore we must not give him up’; he voted with the Government on 8 Mar. and wrote to Sandwich on the 13th: ‘You may be assured, notwithstanding the weak state of my health, I will attend on Friday next, and shall at all times when in my power be happy to obey your commands.’
On the fall of North he was removed from office. Pleading ‘extreme poverty’ he applied to the new Administration for a pension,
If he had persisted in the constant line of worship which he had so long shown to the minister of the day ... he would not (to invert the scripture penalty) have been cast out of the furnace of the Woolwich foundery, nor possibly would he have been rejected by the electors of Queenborough.
He died 18 Dec. 1785.
