Laslett was born in Worcester, the eldest son of a successful banker with the firm of Berwick, Wall and Isaac. Having worked as a boy clerk and assistant cashier at the bank, he served all the terms necessary to be called to the bar, but was instead articled to William Wall, a solicitor and banker of the town, to whose business he succeeded. He practised successfully as a solicitor from 1831 until his retirement in 1846.
‘Eccentric in many things’ (he was ‘not an ordinary man’), Laslett made a stormy and controversial marriage with the daughter of the recently deceased, and so it was rumoured, heavily indebted bishop of Worcester in 1842.
Regarded as a Tory squire, Laslett took little part in politics until June 1851 when, claiming to have been ‘ill-used by his party’, he announced to the Worcester Parliamentary and Financial Reform Association that he now wished to join the effort to promote ‘the comfort and good of the working classes’.
Laslett regarded himself as ‘more the representative of principles than the adherent of party’.
In 1856 Laslett was finally called to the bar, despite having suggested in 1852 that ‘the greatest nuisance in the House of Commons was the number of barristers in it’.
Laslett was returned for Worcester again in 1859, when he demonstrated some sympathy for Lord Derby’s reform bill, in spite of having voted against the measure.
Thereafter, Laslett changed his political views and entered the contest at Worcester in 1865 as a ‘Conservative Liberal’ acting on ‘independent principles’ before retiring from the field.
During the last stage of his life Laslett expended a large portion of his fortune on charitable works. He was a great benefactor to the city of his birth, contributing to the establishment of the Royal Albert Orphans Asylum, restoring two local parish churches at his own expense in 1861-3, and donating 25 acres of land for a burial ground at Worcester. In 1868 he financed the conversion of the old city prison into the almshouses which still bear his name, and funded the city’s music hall in 1878.
