A former stockbroker, Easthope embodied the reforming impulses and social conscience of the Morning Chronicle, the newspaper he owned from 1834. The ‘architect of his own fortune’, he rose from being a bank clerk in his native county of Gloucestershire to a wealthy trader in the City, where he ‘made £150,000 in a few years’.
Although he spoke rarely, Easthope, who had a ‘purposely plain, practical and business-like’ style, could make effective contributions on subjects about which he was knowledgeable, interested or passionate.
On other issues, Easthope was moved by a social conscience that was influenced by the experiences of his constituents and his sense of justice. Although he endorsed the general principle of the new poor law, he complained that ‘deep and general distress’ in manufacturing towns like Leicester rendered it ‘totally inapplicable’.
Although he opposed the 1844 railway bill, his attitude towards government intervention in the industry appears to have been moderated by his service on the 1844 and 1846 inquiries.
He sold the Chronicle to a syndicate of Peelites the following year, and it has been argued that he was a poor proprietor, who compromised the newspaper’s independence and commercial viability by slavishly following a succession of Whig leaders.
