Fitzroy, the 4th duke of Grafton’s youngest son, sat briefly as a Reformer for Thetford before a short illness took his life at the young age of thirty. A member of a politically distinguished and sporting family who held extensive estates in Norfolk and Northamptonshire, Fitzroy’s father had represented Thetford before coming in for Cambridge University in 1784, alongside William Pitt the Younger, to whom he was especially close.
The revised reform bill having restored Thetford’s second Member, Fitzroy offered again for the borough at the 1832 general election.
Like his father, Fitzroy made little impact in the Commons. He was an occasional attender who made no known speeches in the post-Reform era. His select committee work was also limited.
Fitzroy died in harness at his London residence in July 1834 after a feverish illness of ten days.
