Ferrand, who was presumably named after his paternal grandmother’s father George Walker, vicar of Stockton in the mid-eighteenth century, belonged to a Yorkshire family, though his immediate ancestors had resided in Durham. His elder brother Edward, who succeeded their father in 1790, resettled his branch of the family in the West Riding on inheriting, from his kinsman Benjamin Ferrand (d. 1803), the estate at St. Ives, near Bingley.
It is not known whether Ferrand had had earlier ambitions to enter Parliament, but he was returned unopposed for Tralee at the general election of 1831, presumably having purchased the seat from Sir Edward Denny*.
He relinquished Tralee, where the late patron’s heir had ambitions of his own, at the general election of 1832, when he probably did not attempt to stand again for the Commons. However, in January 1835 he was chosen by the agent of the former Tory cabinet minister Lord Westmorland, lord lieutenant of Northamptonshire, to offer at the last minute as a Conservative for Peterborough, where Lord Fitzwilliam, like his father before him, had a preponderating influence. He entered the town on the eve of the contest and put up a spirited fight, but finished in third place behind the sitting Liberal Members. In a parting address, he claimed to have received 281 votes (including 89 plumps) out of the nearly 600 electors polled and congratulated the independent electors on having commenced a campaign to liberate the borough. His charges of widespread intimidation were denied by his successful opponents Sir Robert Heron* and John Fazakerley*, who retorted that it was Ferrand, not he, who had resorted to irregular practices.
Ferrand died, ‘warmly attached to Conservative politics’, in October 1835.
