He entered politics as a Whig, and after this party disbanded became a Democrat.
He was Supervisor of the Town of Westfield from 1851 to 1856; and was Superintendent of the Poor of Richmond County for twelve years.
By 1874, an article in The New York Times referred to Frost as already being deceased.
[1] In 1877, incarcerated former political boss William M. Tweed named Frost as one of the politicians who had engaged in corruption during his political tenure.
This article about a member of the New York State Senate is a stub.