The Ffolkes family had acquired Hillington, near King’s Lynn, in the latter part of the seventeenth century, and Ffolkes’s father, Martin Browne, served for over 31 years as MP for King’s Lynn on his wife’s interest.
In the opening months of the first Reform parliament, Ffolkes voted with the government in upholding naval and military sinecures, 14 Feb., opposing Attwood’s distress motion, 21 Mar., and removing clause 147 of the Irish temporalities bill, 21 Jun. 1833. However, he divided against the ministry in favour of Chandos’s motion seeking agricultural relief, 26 Apr. 1833, and later that same evening was amongst the slim majority in a thin house which passed Ingilby’s motion for halving the malt tax. Only four days later, however, in a move which prompted considerable consternation in Norfolk, Ffolkes decided not to vote upon Althorp’s retaliatory motion successfully rescinding the malt tax resolution.
As chairman of the Freebridge Lynn union, he was a stalwart supporter of the new Poor Law, believing that it would ‘produce a greater feeling of independence among the labouring classes and… tend… to the improvement of their moral character’.
Despite concerns that Ffolkes, who had a reputation for parsimony, would be ‘driven off by the fear of expense’ from contesting the 1835 election
Ffolkes was a keen advocate of ecclesiastical reform, but criticised the composition of the Ecclesiastical Commission appointed by Peel, asking ‘could they expect that the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Bishop of London, or the Bishop of Gloucester would Reform the Church?’
Following a hustings speech in which he extolled the reductions in taxation under the Melbourne government, Ffolkes was defeated in third place at the 1837 election, 39 votes behind the Conservative William Chute.
As chairman of the Norfolk estuary company, Ffolkes turned the first sod of that body’s land reclamation scheme in front of a ten thousand-strong crowd in 1850.
