Background
The first son of a “roaring Shropshire squire” Richard Cresswell of Sidbury, Shropshire and his wife Mary Moreton, and grandson of a staunch Cavalier, also named Richard Cresswell (formerly a page to Charles I). Cresswell was nicknamed “Black Dick Cresswell”. He had inherited his father"s unstable traits, but also his grandfather"s loyalism.
His father, having been disinherited, was described as “a perfect madman”, “a Judas and devil incarnate” by his son-in-law, who when obliged to stay with the family for a time at Sidbury, wrote that “to live with him (Cresswell the elder) is to live in Bedlam, for he is made up of noise, nonsense, railing, bawling and impertinence..”.
Career
The addition of his wife"s properties, including the Wiltshire manors of Sherston, Malmesbury and Norton, helped consolidate his position among the gentry of north Wiltshire. Cresswell stood as a Tory candidate for the borough of Bridgnorth, but after his election he made little impression on the House of Commons and is not known to have ever made a speech in Parliament. The following election he was returned as the member for Wootton Bassett.
However, after the death of Queen Anne, Cresswell refrained from any further involvement in Parliament, probably spending the remainder of his life abroad.
His already questionable reputation was sullied even further by his arrest in 1716 on thirty-eight separate charges of buggery "with a young Genoese boy he had lately dressed up". In 1730, due to financial problems, he was forced to mortgage his Pinkney Park estate in Wiltshire for £10,000.
He died intestate in 1743.
Membership
3rd Parliament of Great Britain. 4th Parliament of Great Britain]
He was a member of the October Club. And in 1713 voted for the French commerce bill.