Brandling’s public career began in 1618, upon his marriage to a daughter of Sir Ralph Grey*, at which time his father settled Northumberland estates worth £300 p.a. on the couple. In 1622-3 he took control of his father’s business and estates, and in 1624 was returned as knight for Northumberland, along with his brother-in-law Sir William Grey, 1st bt.
Brandling was re-elected in 1625, but left no trace on the records of the session; he may have stayed away because of the plague. He remained active in local affairs, searching the houses of Catholics for arms at the outbreak of the war with Spain in the autumn of 1625, and serving as sheriff of Northumberland in 1626-7, when he arrested his own father for failure to provide portions for his siblings. By 1640 he was a deputy lieutenant, heavily involved in defending his shire against the Scots. He presumably fled when the Covenanters invaded, and seems to have died shortly thereafter. However, the date and place of his death are unknown, nor has any will or administration been found.
