Parkyns, a boon companion of the Prince of Wales and a prominent freemason, owed his candidature at Leicester in 1790 to his brother-in-law Clement Winstanley of Braunston, a local Whig stalwart. Returned after a compromise intended to prevent an all-out contest, he had to hide from ‘the violence of his own friends’.
Rancliffe’s wishes, expressed to Portland in 1797, for peerage or military promotion could not be met. He died of dropsy v.p. 17 Nov. 1800.
