An associate of Lord Byron’s at Cambridge, Ferrall was described as a ‘wild Irishman’, and is said to have kept a bear along with Byron at Trinity College.
During the early 1840s Ferrall resided at Beechwood, a few miles outside Roscommon town, and was one of the largest landowners in the county. He had been viewed as one of the county’s ‘pure Whigs’, until the government’s refusal to appoint him as high sheriff caused a temporary estrangement from the party.
A spendthrift, Farrell was not regarded as a sound candidate by the agents who managed his estates, one of whom intimated to a colleague: ‘Bad as he is while in Ireland he would be far worse in London’.
Whatever time Ferrall did spend in London as an MP, little of it appears to have been passed at Westminster, and he is known to have voted in only one division, in favour of the secret ballot, 21 June 1842. This appears to have been the sum of his contribution to parliamentary business before he was unseated on a counter-petition brought by his opponent and his agents found guilty of treating at the 1841 general election, 21 Mar. 1843.
By this time, however, Ferrall was in ‘serious financial trouble’, having incurred a number of heavy debts. Although his vast estates were worth £9,000 per annum, he was ‘not financially liquid’ as he held his land under a deed of trust against which there were many claimants. By the mid-1840s his net annual income was not much more than £600, and he did not therefore play any further part in politics, noting only that the imprisonment of Daniel O’Connell in 1844 had ‘increased the confidence of the capitalists’ in Irish securities.
