An ambitious man, Gresley or Greisley, as he insisted on spelling his name after 1830, was a flamboyant Tory who attracted litigation and controversy in equal measure.
Liberal dithering allowed Gresley a head start in his campaign for South Derbyshire at the 1832 general election, but his votes against reform proved unpopular and he was pelted with rubbish on his arrival in Derby, 12 Nov. 1832.
In 1835, he stood again alongside the Conservative Sir George Crewe, who had dismissed him as a ‘violent ultra Tory’ in 1832.
Gresley, who was reasonably active in the 1835 session, generally voted with the Conservatives in major divisions.
He retired at the 1837 general election due to illness, though a replacement already been announced before his injury, on 4 Mar. 1836, and it appears that local Conservatives thought a less vociferous figure would enable them to avoid a contest, as indeed proved to be the case.
Gresley was the author of a number of works, including the novel Sir Philip Gasteneys (1829), which contained ‘a spirited description of the evils of contemporary Rome’, and the unflattering Life of Pope Gregory VII (1832).
