‘Mr. Gilbert’, wrote the Gentleman’s Magazine, (1798, p. 1146), ‘to improve a small estate by the profession of the law ... was called to the bar, but with no great success.’ He held a commission in the regiment raised by Lord Gower during the ’45; became Gower’s land agent; and through his influence was appointed to a semi-sinecure office. Granville, 2nd Earl Gower, brought Gilbert into Parliament for Newcastle-under-Lyme, and subsequently for Lichfield; and procured for him a place at the great wardrobe.
Through his connexion with Gower he belonged to the Bedford party. His first recorded speech on a political issue was against the repeal of the Stamp Act, 21 Feb. 1766. He voted against Chatham’s Administration on the land tax, 27 Feb. 1767. Neither in December 1766 nor December 1767 did Bedford ask for an office for Gilbert, nor, after the Bedfords joined Administration, is there any record of his applying for office.
Gilbert early began the work which was to become the main interest of his career. His first poor law bill, which grouped parishes into unions, passed the Commons in April 1765 but was rejected by the Lords. Further attempts to improve the poor law followed, and in 1776 he was responsible for an Act requiring overseers to make returns of sums raised by the poor rates. Canals and roads also occupied his attention; and his Act of 1773, consolidating the law relating to turnpikes, is regarded as a landmark in the history of English highway administration.
After the Bedfords took office in December 1767 Gilbert regularly voted with Administration. Until 1778 he rarely spoke on political questions, and the speech he made on 2 Mar. 1778 took the House by surprise. Concerned at ‘the expenditure of public money, particularly the exorbitant contracts and abuses of office ... he declared his resolution ... to propose a tax of one fourth upon the incomes of all placemen’.
James Harris, in a letter to his son of 10 Mar. 1778,
Gilbert voted against Lowther’s motion to end the war, 12 Dec. 1781. But by February 1782 his attitude towards North’s Administration had changed. On 16 Feb. Sandwich, trying to win support in view of the forthcoming motion of censure against the Admiralty, wrote to Robinson:
He was quite undetermined how he should vote; he did not believe all his Majesty’s ministers were bad, but some of them undoubtedly were; he thought if there was a coalition of parties a good Administration might be formed that would be a means of saving this country if it was not too far gone.
He voted with Administration.
On 22 May 1781 Gilbert had proposed another bill ‘for the better relief and employment of the poor’, the well known ‘Gilbert Act’ of 1782. This gave parishes increased power to combine to build workhouses for the support of children and those unable to work; and sanctioned the practise of giving outdoor relief to the able-bodied. It was, wrote Sidney and Beatrice Webb,
In August 1782 Gilbert was asked by Shelburne to conduct an inquiry into the value of places and pensions, for which he was paid £700:
Gilbert died 18 Dec. 1798, ‘in his 79th year’.
