A handsome, well-connected and ambitious linguist and author, consumed by an overriding ambition to enter and succeed in Parliament, Gresley claimed direct descent from the Norman Roger de Toeni, whom the Conqueror had rewarded with the manor of Castle Gresley, part of the Drakelow estate, equally divided between Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Staffordshire. Sacrificing his unentailed estates to his passion for politics and high society, from 1825 he ‘parcelled out’ land, mineral rights and tithes ‘in such a manner that by annual sales it should last him for life; but he died a comparatively young man’.
He had made known his desire for a seat on joining the Tory Derby True Blue Club in 1820, but by-elections in Derbyshire in 1822 and Staffordshire in 1823 provided no opening for him.
Drakelow is a curious old house. We dined in an immense parlour, quite out of proportion to the rest … Additions he is making … are in excellent taste, and will greatly improve it. They are built in the style … [of] the old manor house of Queen Elizabeth. We walked … over his stables, which are excellent. Sir Roger appears to live at a great expense, and must be deeply injuring his fortune. However, he has less cause for regret, as it seems unlikely, if Lady Sophia lives, that he will ever have children … Poor Sir Roger. It is a strange wild scrambling life he is leading.
NLW, Ormathwaite mss FG1/5, pp. 11-13.
Aligning himself politically with Sir Edward Knatchbull* and the Ultras, he procured a hostile memorial on distress from Derbyshire that month, which Gloucester criticized and refused to present.
The Wellington administration listed Gresley among the ‘violent Ultras’, but he divided with them when they were brought down on the civil list, 15 Nov. 1830, a vote he claimed the Ultras never forgave.
Gresley declared his candidature for Derbyshire at the first post-reform election in June 1831 and announced that he had ‘abandoned all hope of a successful opposition to the bill’. The Times seized on his ‘conversion’.
