Turnor was the eldest son of Christopher Turnor, of Stoke Rochford near Grantham, ‘one of the wealthiest commoners’ in Lincolnshire, who sat as Conservative member for the southern division of the county, 1841-47.
In April 1868 Turnor, who ‘in early life ... aspired to parliamentary honours’, was brought forward on his father’s interest for a vacancy at Grantham.
Prior to the dissolution in November 1868 Turnor made no known speeches and did not sit on any select committees. Unsurprisingly he voted against Gladstone’s Irish church bill, 30 Apr. 1868, but he followed the Liberal leader into the division lobby in support of the representation of the people (Scotland) bill, 18 May 1868. At the 1868 general election he came in for Lincolnshire South, where the Conservative vote remained solid, and thereafter gave steady but silent support to Disraeli.
Following his retirement from Parliament in 1880, Turnor devoted his energies to his estates at Panton and Stoke Rochford, where his attention to detail won him ‘recognition as a model landlord’.
Turnor died suddenly whilst out shooting at Hatton, near Wragby, Lincolnshire, in December 1903, leaving no issue.
