Bagge was an ‘affable, unostentatious country gentleman’, whose family, originally Swedish, had held land in Norfolk from 1560.
Bagge first attempted to enter parliament in 1835, when he sought election for West Norfolk calling for ‘a just commutation of tithes’.
Bagge’s voting pattern was generally in keeping with these Conservative views, and he was one of only 39 to vote against the second reading of the Irish municipal corporations bill, 8 Mar. 1839, a measure seen by many as endangering Protestantism in Ireland. His opposition to Lord John Russell’s perceived anti-Anglican elementary education bill, June 1839, and his division of the House a year later against the supply of £9,800 to Maynooth, underlined similar religious concerns.
Bagge was returned unopposed in the Conservative triumph of 1841. However, his relationship with the Peel ministry, particularly on commercial and religious matters, proved fractious. On 23 May 1842, he voted against the government for the proposal that the duty on imported cattle be levied by weight.
At both the 1847 and 1852 elections Bagge headed the poll. In Parliament, his Protestant and Protectionist identities were reaffirmed by his opposition to the removal of Jewish disabilities and his stand with only 52 others in censuring free trade, 26 Nov. 1852. His support for the repeal of the malt tax, 8 May 1851, was a critical cause for both farming and brewing, to which he returned repeatedly in later years.
Having rarely attended in the 1856 session – he was present for just 13 out of 198 divisions – in March 1857 Bagge announced his parliamentary retirement, and at the dissolution duly stepped down, and was replaced by a Liberal.
Bagge’s trusteeship of the Downham Market savings bank, his involvement with the Lynn and Dereham and Lynn and Ely railway companies, together with his patronage of the construction of seaside houses in Great Yarmouth and his presence and provision of prizes at the Norfolk Agricultural exhibition, attest to the ‘kindly interest’ he took in ‘local institutions’ and affairs.
