A corn factor and ‘highly respectable London merchant’, Farrand offered silent support for Conservative principles during his brief spell in the reformed Commons.
Farrand was passing through Stafford in December 1832 when he was approached by a deputation to stand for that borough at the general election, as one candidate was reported to be retiring. As this turned out not to be the case, Farrand withdrew at the nomination but told electors ‘that I may probably on some future occasion appear before you as a candidate’.
Farrand cast votes against the ballot and the replacement of church rates by pew-rents before standing his ground at the 1837 general election. He was re-elected in second place after reiterating that he was ‘an enemy to the abominable poor law’ and a proponent of ‘Conservative principles’.
Farrand had built a ‘neat mansion’ in Holme Hale, near Swaffham, Norfolk, where he was lord of the manor, in the late 1830s.
