In 1748–9 Brand toured Europe with Hollis,. He made further European travels from 1750 to 1753. In June 1756 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society.[1][2]
Heir to Thomas Hollis
On his death in 1774, Hollis left his estate, at Corscombe and Halstock in Dorset, to Brand on condition that Brand added the name of Hollis to his own name.[1]
In 1774 Brand Hollis was briefly elected to Parliament as the member for Hindon, Wiltshire, by spending 15 guineas per vote.[4] On petition the election was declared void due to bribery by the winning candidates. He and his fellow candidate, Richard Smith, were prosecuted, fined one thousand marks, and imprisoned for six months. In a rerun of the election Brand Hollis withdrew his name but Smith was re-elected.[5]
Brand Hollis resided at The Hyde, a country house in Essex bought by his father in 1718, and improved for him in 1761 by William Chambers.[7][8] In July 1786, he entertained there his friend John Adams, the first American ambassador to the Court of St. James's. Adams stayed for several days, as recorded in his memoirs.[9][10]
Death and aftermath
On his death in 1804 Brand Hollis left Corscombe and his own property in Ingatestone to John Disney, a personal friend.[1] Disney erected a monument to him in Ingatestone Church, and published his Memoirs of Thomas Brand Hollis in 1808.[11][12] The Hyde was demolished in 1965, following damage in a fire.[8]
^Page, Anthony (2003). John Jebb and the Enlightenment origins of British radicalism (1. publ ed.). Westport, Conn. London: Praeger. ISBN978-0-275-97775-7.