Remembered for ‘his urbanity as a gentleman, and his charming manners in private life, joined to his brilliant wit and fine conversational powers’, Bagnall, an ironmaster, was an unexceptional Conservative backbencher, although the Liberal party organiser Joseph Parkes described him as ‘formidable in coin & piety’.
Having gained experience of local administration while serving on the West Bromwich improvement commission, Bagnall in 1859 accepted a ‘very influential and numerously signed’ requisition to offer at Walsall. He declared his attachment to ‘Liberal Conservative’ principles, and while admitting that the Derby ministry’s reform bill required some improvement, condemned Liberal opposition to it as ‘factious and unpatriotic’. He emphasised his local connections, and his efforts to promote the interests of the working classes and the religious instruction of children.
Bagnall was a keen supporter of various educational bodies, and in 1860 lectured to the Bloxwich Mutual Improvement Society on his travels in Egypt and Palestine, where he had made a three month tour.
In 1865 Bagnall received an unexpected invitation to offer again for Parliament, when the disgraced railway entrepreneur George Hudson, who had been due to stand in the Conservative interest at Whitby, was arrested shortly before the nomination at the behest of one of his creditors and imprisoned at York Castle.
At Westminster Bagnall generally voted with the Conservatives, opposing the abolition of church rates, 7 Mar. 1866, and Gladstone’s motion on the Irish church, 3 Apr. 1868. He divided against the Liberal ministry’s reform bill, 27 Apr. 1866, and in his first significant contribution to debate, spoke forcefully against proposals to group constituencies, 28 May 1866.
Bagnall was said to be ‘an eloquent and pungent speaker’, and reportedly gave a ‘very humorous address’ when proposing the health of the ladies at the inaugural banquet of the York Working Men’s Conservative Association in 1867.
His committee service also reflected his industrial interests. He served on the 1867 select committee on the Factory Acts extension bill and the hours of labour regulation bill, which recommended the appointment of a royal commission to consider whether legislation should be extended to print works, bleaching and dyeing works.
Bagnall did not seek re-election in 1868, explaining in ‘a long, eloquent, and powerful speech’ that ‘his private duties were incompatible with his continuance in Parliament’.
In 1869 Bagnall was among the ironmasters who attended the first provincial meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute, and later served as a council member of that body.
Serious illness, ‘arising from an affection of the heart’, meant that Bagnall left Whitby in 1883 to take up residence at Brighton, putting Sneaton Castle up to let and entrusting his business affairs to his brother.
