Remembered as ‘the best judge of port wine in the House’, Steel sat as Liberal MP for his native Cockermouth following a successful legal career.
Following an invitation from the borough’s leading Liberals, Steel was returned unopposed for Cockermouth at the August 1854 by-election necessitated by the death of the sitting member.
At the 1857 general election he offered his ‘firm though independent’ support to Palmerston, and on the China question, he stated that ‘looking on the confusion which prevailed at that crisis, and on the prosperity which now reigns, I consider the present government entitled to our support’.
A frequent attender in his first two Parliaments, Steel’s handful of known contributions to debate all had a legal dimension, though they ultimately made little impact.
A less assiduous attender in the 1860s, Steel remained ‘eminently Palmerstonian’, though he voted for Locke King’s county franchise bill, 13 Mar. 1861, and Baines’ borough franchise bill, 11 May 1864, in opposition to the premier .
Steel died in harness at his residence at Derwent Bank, Cumberland, on Good Friday 1868.
