Ellison informed the House, 23 Apr. 1797, that ‘he was proud to acknowledge, that he owed the means of having procured a seat in that House to his father’s having been a virtuous and industrious man’. His father, the son of an inland navigation entrepreneur from Thorne in the West Riding who settled at Lincoln, was in partnership with Abel Smith and John Browne in the Lincoln bank founded in 1775. This, with a two-thirds share in the Witham navigation, was inherited by Richard junior.
Ellison, whose firm subscribed £20,000 to the loyalty loan for 1797, prided himself on his ‘independent character and fortune’ and had to be reminded on one occasion that he was not the only Member of that description in the House.
Returned unopposed in 1802, Ellison complained of the postponement of Burdett’s motion, 26 Nov., having travelled ‘upwards of 170 miles’ to attend it. He stood by ministers on the question of the resumption of hostilities, 11 May, and on 13 July 1803 criticized Pitt for his attack on Addington’s income tax regulations. He was named to the civil list committee, 2 Feb. 1804. On Pitt’s return to power, he was listed ‘doubtful’ and spoke and voted against his additional force bill in June 1804. In September he was listed ‘Addington’, then as one of Addington’s friends ‘on whom some impression might be made’ and finally ‘doubtful Addington’. On 28 Mar. 1805 he favoured the militia enlisting bill and on 8 Apr. was in the government minority on Whitbread’s censure of Melville. He had favoured the commission of naval inquiry. He supported the criminal prosecution of Melville, 12 June, and a month later was listed a supporter of Lord Sidmouth: so his support of ministry had coincided with Sidmouth’s alliance with it. He was prepared to respect Pitt’s memory by public payment of his debts. He was at first well disposed to the Grenville ministry, of which Sidmouth was a member, and voted for the repeal of Pitt’s Additional Force Act, 30 Apr. 1806; but not without a quibble (9 May), and on the training bill, 27 June, he remarked: ‘although I wish to support ministers, I will not and cannot as they go on’. He felt the same about their militia officers bill. Writing to Lord Grenville, 19 Nov. 1806, he referred, in asking for local patronage, to his ‘decided general support’ of his government. He favoured the abolition of sinecures, 10 Feb. 1807, but a bid to add him to the finance committee next day failed. Grenville’s sister described him as ‘one of the Saints’,
At the election of 1807 Ellison offered for the county: he was snubbed as a parvenu during the campaign. He insisted that he was ‘not a Tory or a bigot’, but relied on hostility to the Grenville ministry’s Catholic proposals. Sidmouth thought he had a chance of success, but he was defeated and fell back on Lincoln, where he was unopposed.
He re-entered Parliament in March 1813, as a Treasury supporter, for a Wiltshire borough. Although an opening occurred for him at Lincoln a year later, he did not propose vacating his seat to regain the other, which went to his nephew. On 24 May 1813 he voted against Catholic relief, as also in 1817. He defended the revised Corn Laws, 17 Feb. 1815. He opposed inquiry into the Regent’s expenditure, 31 May, but on 3 July opposed the Duke of Cumberland’s marriage grant. He supported the property tax, 18 Mar. 1816, the aliens bill, 19 May, and the civil list, 24 May. He opposed the reduction of the lords of Admiralty, 25 Feb. 1817. On 10 Feb. 1818 he voted against censuring the Scottish law officers and he favoured the prosecution of booksellers offering radical publications for sale, 21 May. In the ensuing Parliament he came out against the Windsor establishment on 22 Feb. 1819, but seems to have changed his mind by 25 Feb. He supported ministers against Tierney’s censure motion, 18 May, and voted for the foreign enlistment bill, 10 June. He was against the extension of the franchise at Penryn, 22 June. He was credited with voting for inquiry into the abuses of charitable foundations, 23 June. He remained in town until 23 Dec. 1819 in support of repressive legislation.
Ellison was defeated in 1820 and did not seek reelection. He died 7 July 1827.
