Frances Gibson Shepheard Ingram (1734-1807) was a wealthy heiress and landowner who was instrumental in the design of the landscape at Temple Newsam, Leeds. Frances was the illegitimate daughter of the rich Tory merchant, Samuel Shepheard; her mother was called Gibson.[1] Samuel left Frances £40,000 in his will stating that she must not marry a peer, an Irishman or a Scotsman.[1][2] She married Charles Ingram, 9th Viscount Irwin in 1758 after several years of legal dispute.[1] At Charles's seat in Yorkshire, Temple Newsam, Frances insisted that Capability Brown redesign the parkland.[1] Frances was an active gardener, supervising the planting in the grounds.[1] For instance, surviving correspondence shows she helped her husband mark out where shrubs were to be planted along her gravel walk.[1]
Frances collected works of art, including Italian classical landscapes.[1] She was painted as a shepherdess by Benjamin Wilson, reflecting her interest in pastoral landscape.[1][3] She was also painted by Joshua Reynolds in a pensive mood, leaning on a book, a copy of which is at Temple Newsam.[4]
When Charles died in 1778, he left the Temple Newsam estate as well as eighty burgages in Horsham, Sussex to Frances.[5] A resolute Tory, Frances used the burgages to dominate local politics by appointing members to the constituency and telling them how to vote; as well as controlling the local land court.[5] She was challenged by the Whig 11th Duke of Norfolk who began buying up burgages; but Frances used her local knowledge and her tenacity to triumph over the Duke in a House of Commons hearing that ruled in her favour over the election of 1790.[5] In 1796, she remodelled the south wing at Temple Newsam; and in 1806 the Prince of Wales visited her there giving her some Chinese wallpaper.[6]