Heir to the domineering Scottish-born Liverpool merchant John Gladstone (1764-1851), Gladstone dutifully imitated his father’s Conservatism during a short, fragmented and frequently hapless parliamentary career, which contrasted starkly with the steady rise of his younger brother William Ewart Gladstone (1809-98), to whom he ‘bore a strong resemblance’.
At the 1832 general election Gladstone was elected by a single vote for the Irish constituency of Portarlington and it was said that he would return to Liverpool ‘with much lighter pockets than he had when he left it’.
In 1833 Gladstone opposed the appointment of an inquiry into the 1832 Liverpool election and a year later defended the mayor and corporation from attacks during the debate on disenfranchising the port’s freemen.
With his re-election for Portarlington unlikely, Gladstone offered for the venal borough of Leicester in 1835, and was elected in second place behind another Conservative. His continued interest in Ireland was shown by his membership of the 1835 committee which favourably reviewed the performance of the board of public works established in 1831 (by 1 & 2 Will. IV, c.33), and recommended that it be granted more resources and powers.
At the 1837 general election resurgent Reformers captured both Leicester seats, with Gladstone finishing bottom of the poll.
Remaining an orthodox Conservative and Evangelical, Thomas was troubled by William’s divergence from their father’s religious and political opinions.
In later life, Gladstone’s appointment as lord lieutenant of Kincardineshire in 1876 provided some compensation for his political disappointments, and his relationship with William improved.
