Described by the novelist Mary Shelley as ‘a plain silentious but intelligent looking man’, Gaskell was ‘of the soundest and most conscientious liberal opinions’.
Gaskell does not appear to have been particularly politically active before seeking election for Wakefield in 1832, although he was among those who signed the requisition for a county meeting in 1819 following the Peterloo massacre, and he attended a local pro-reform meeting in February 1831.
Reviewing his parliamentary conduct on the hustings in 1835, Gaskell assured his constituents that he had been ‘punctual in his attendance’, a claim confirmed by Shelley, who marvelled that ‘he attends the house night after night and dull committees and likes it! – for truly after a country town and country society, the dullest portion of London seems as gay as a masked ball’.
Although generally Liberal in his sympathies, his voting patterns displayed considerable independence, reflecting Gaskell’s claim that ‘I have attached myself to no party’, and he prided himself on his political consistency, even when this necessitated the painful duty of opposing ministers.
Gaskell’s radical leanings prompted concern among some of his constituents, and a joint Whig-Conservative committee began searching for an opponent in November 1834.
At the 1837 election Conservative organisational efforts at Wakefield paid off, and Gaskell, whose address voiced his desire to see ‘salutary Reforms… peaceably effected’, was defeated.
Following this abortive candidature, Gaskell withdrew into private life.
Gaskell remained in good health until the spring of 1873, when, despite a gloomy prognosis, he overcame a serious illness. He succumbed to bronchitis and died at Lupset Hall after a short illness in December 1875. At his request, his interment beside his wife at Wakefield’s Unitarian burial ground was private.
