Hailing from a Foxite family, Lord Charles was the heir presumptive to his disgraced elder, childless brother George, 3rd marquess Townshend, who had been disinherited by his father following numerous reputed homosexual scandals before succeeding to the marquessate in 1811, after which he lived abroad.
Townshend is not known to have spoken or served on any committees in his last spell in Parliament, but he remained a steady attender. Although he was described by Charles Dod as being ‘of Whig principles’, Townshend was not an uncritical admirer of Grey’s administration.
Townshend retired at the 1835 general election.
In the early 1840s Townshend sought to protect his position as heir presumptive to the marquessate by taking action against the illegitimate offspring of his estranged sister-in-law, marchioness Townshend, who had remarried without divorcing the 3rd marquess. A son by her later, bigamous marriage styled himself as Lord John Townshend and then the earl of Leicester, one of the Townshend family’s courtesy titles, by which name he was known when he was elected as Conservative MP for Bodmin in 1841. In response Lord Charles secured a private Act, passed in 1843, declaring that the marchioness’s children had no claim to the Townshend name, titles or estates. The ‘earl of Leicester’ subsequently changed his name to John Dunn-Gardner.
