The Frankland family had been landowners at Thirkleby for more than 250 years, and a Frankland had first been returned as MP for Thirsk in 1628. Both Sir Robert’s father and grandfather had sat for the borough before him.
Frankland had ‘made little mark in the House’ before 1832, being an occasional attender who voted with the Whigs, and the same is true of his brief service after the Reform Act.
Listed by Dod’s Parliamentary Companion as a ‘moderate Reformer’, Frankland’s political sympathies shifted after his retirement from the Commons.
In 1836 Frankland inherited the Buckinghamshire estate of Chequers Court from his cousin (and fellow Thirsk MP in the pre-Reform House), Robert Greenhill Russell. In accordance with Russell’s will, Frankland adopted the additional surname of Russell in 1837. Frankland did not proceed with his plans to sell the estate, which Disraeli as a prospective purchaser valued at £50,000, instead employing the architect Edward Buckton Lamb to make improvements.
