Elected in 1841 in a local protest against the free trader Viscount Howick, the eldest son of the former prime minister Earl Grey, Cresswell sat as a silent Conservative member for Northumberland North until the 1847 dissolution. Prior to entering the Commons, he had, through inheritance and marriage, established himself as a prominent member of the Northumbrian landed gentry. He was the eldest son of Francis Easterby, a sailor and merchant, and Frances Cresswell, daughter and co-heir of John Cresswell, whose family had been seated in Northumberland since the reign of Richard I.
Five days before the nomination for Northumberland North at the 1841 general election, Cresswell accepted a requisition from 38 notable electors to offer in the Conservative interest.
If the sole purpose of Cresswell’s entry into the Commons was to oppose corn law repeal in the division lobbies, he duly achieved this. After backing Peel’s sliding scale on corn duties, 9 Mar. 1842, he voted against repeal, 15 May 1843, 26 June 1844, and following a period abroad owing to ill health, returned to the Commons to vote against Peel on the corn importation bill’s critical third reading, 15 May 1846. Beyond these votes, however, he was inconspicuous during the key debates on agricultural protection. Indeed, he is not known to have ever spoken in debate, and he did not sit on any select committees.
Generally an infrequent attender in the Commons, Cresswell’s voting record reflected both his staunch support of the established Church and his opposition to the operation of the poor law. He was in the minority that backed John Walter’s motion for the reconstruction of the poor laws on ‘Christian grounds’, 23 Feb. 1843, and he voted against non-denominational education, 18 May 1843, the abolition of Anglican oaths at universities, 25 May 1843, and the Dissenters’ Chapels bill, 6 June 1844.
Dogged by poor health, Cresswell retired at the 1847 dissolution. His parliamentary career, which had begun in such memorable circumstances, had ultimately been forgettable. After further time abroad to repair his health, he returned to Cresswell Hall, and resumed his duties as a magistrate.
Cresswell died at the family seat at Cresswell in May 1879. Aged ninety at his death, he had been the oldest magistrate in Northumberland.
