Tyrell, who was ‘brought up to be a well educated country gentleman’, was a member of the Stowmarket branch of the Tyrell family, who had been major landowners in Essex and Suffolk since the Norman Conquest.
Tyrell’s conversion from a Tory to a Reformer, and his allegiance to Sir Henry Edward Bunbury, a well-connected scion of a distinguished Whig family, who had sat for Suffolk 1830-32, was the source of considerable comment at the 1832 general election, when he offered for the newly created western division of the county. The Conservative Bury and Suffolk Herald attacked Tyrell for:
his subservience to Sir H. Bunbury in St. Stephen’s and to ... [his] faction in Suffolk, notwithstanding that he had opposed the one and the other all his life before ... [which] betokened a mind ready to break faith with an old friend the moment it was found a more beneficial collusion could be made with an old enemy.
Bury and Suffolk Herald, 26 Dec. 1832.
At the nomination Tyrell asserted that he was coming forward on ‘free and independent principles’ and insisted that, aside from the question of Reform, he had no partisan loyalties. He took great care, though, to present himself as ‘a friend to agriculture’, and argued for a fixed or graduated duty on corn, rather than the removal of protection. He also called for the abolition of slavery and the reform of church tithes.
Tyrell attended steadily and gave silent support to Grey’s ministry on most major issues.
Preferring the pursuits of the country squire to the demands of a career in Parliament, Tyrell retired at the 1834 dissolution, in order to return to ‘the repose of domestic life’.
Tyrell died at Plashwood, Haughley in January 1872, at the advanced age of ninety-five.
