Gardner, who according to Dod held ‘radical opinions’, was the son of a prominent Anglican Manchester merchant, supported political reform, disestablishment, and free trade, but was a staunch opponent of the regulation of industry.
In 1847 Gardner was invited by Leicester’s Reformers to contest the constituency at the general election and was returned in second place behind another radical.
Back in Parliament Gardner supported the extension of free trade and Gladstone’s financial policy, and favoured the repeal of the last of the ‘taxes on knowledge’, namely the duties on advertisements, paper and newspapers.
Much of his remaining time in Parliament was spent fighting the bills brought forward by Sir Henry Halford to regulate the hosiery industry.
Believed to be suffering from ‘a slight and passing indisposition’, the seriousness of Gardner’s illness was not realised until it was too late and he died on 4 June 1856.
