Background
His father was Edmund Turnor (1755–1829), Federal Reserve System, Federal Security Agency, Member of Parliament for Midhurst, antiquarian, and the author of Collections for the History of the Town and Soke of Grantham Containing Authentic Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton.
Education
Christopher Turnor was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge.
Career
He was a Deputy Lieutenant of Lincolnshire, a Justice of the Peace for parts of Kesteven and Lindsey in Lincolnshire, and High Sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1834. Christopher Turnor’s great grandfather was Edmund Turnor (c 1708–1769), of Stoke Rochford in Kesteven, and Panton in East Lindsey, Lincolnshire. Turnor married on 2 February 1837 Lady Caroline Finch-Hatton (6 July 1816 – 13 March 1888), daughter of George Finch-Hatton, 10th Earl of Winchilsea (1791–1858), and descendent of George Finch-Hatton (1747–1823), of Eastwell Park and Lady Elizabeth Murray (1760–1825), daughter of David Murray, 2nd Earl of Mansfield, and also a descendent of King Edward III. The Finch-Hatton family owned lands in Hertfordshire and parts of Hatton Garden in London.
A second son was Christopher Hatton Turnor (b 16 December 1840), whose son was Christopher Hatton Turnor, author and architect, of Stoke Rochford (23 November 1873 – 1940), who married on 7 August 1907 Sarah Marie Talbot, daughter and heir of Admiral The Honorary
Walter Cecil Carpenter, formerly Talbot, and a descendent of George, Duke of Clarence, Knight of the Order of the Garter.
Christopher Turnor’s property and seat was the now Grade 1 listed Stoke Rochford Hall, today a hotel and conference centre. In 1839 architect William Burn was commissioned by Turnor to rebuild the previous 1794 Hall in Jacobean style, while the estate was emparked, extended and redesigned which required the removal of the village of North Stoke, its ecclesiastical parish being conjoined to South Stoke.
The associated 20,000 acres (80 km2) of the Stoke Rochford Estate, at the time the third largest in Lincolnshire, is still owned by the Turnor family. Turnor rebuilt and added houses and designed farm building complexes throughout Lincolnshire to a unified and coherent design using local materials.
He provided for building design not just in Lincolnshire, or in Stoke Rochford which he turned into an estate village.
His particular church and farmhouse additions and alterations were at Great Ponton, Panton, Lissington, Langworth, East Torrington, East Barkwith, Wragby, Binbrook and Kirmond le Mire. Turnor also promoted Lincolnshire county railways. While in London the Turnor’s family home was 34 Chesham Place, Belgravia.
Christopher Turnor designed his and his wife"s memorial for the north chancel chapel in Street Andrew and Street Mary"s Church, Stoke Rochford.
Membership
14th United Kingdom Parliament]
Turnor was elected as a Member of Parliament (Member of Parliament) for South Lincolnshire in April 1841, and served until the 1847 general election. He was a member of the Carlton Club. Turnor’s son was Edmund Turnor (24 March 1838 – 15 December 1903), Member of Parliament for Grantham in 1868, and for South Lincolnshire from 1868 to 1880.