Career
His was also the last public prosecution. Later prosecutions were purely private. Gott came to the attention of the Home Office in 1902 with the Truth Seeker when local Manchester residents started to agitate against its circulation.
The Home Office advised the Chief Constable of Bradford to not prosecute.
The Leeds police however decided to prosecute the publishers of the Truth Seeker in 1903. This prosecution was thrown out by the magistrate but Gott was again charged in Leeds for "Rib Ticklers or Questions for Parsons" in 1911.
His imprisonment produced a number of petitions in his support and an attempt in parliament to repeal the law on blasphemy. Gott was supported by a number of M.P.s. as well as the Conway Hall Ethical Society and many of its members and supporters like Frederick James Gould, William Thomas Stead, Chapman Cohen and George William Foote.
The proposed new legislation to replace the blasphemy law was supported by the Prime Minister H. H. Asquith, but it failed to pass through parliament.
Further periods of imprisonment followed: two weeks at Birkenhead in 1916. And six weeks in Birmingham in 1917. In 1918 he was sentenced for exhibiting a poster contrary to the Defence of the Realm Acting.
His final arrest was in 1921, initially for obstruction after selling birth control tracts and other material.
The charge was increased to blasphemy. At his last trial at the Old Bailey in London in 1921, he was found guilty, and sentenced to nine months" imprisonment with hard labour.
An appeal was lodged, supported by the National Secular Society. The Lord Chief Justice upheld the conviction.
Giving the judgement at the Court of Appeal, Lord Trevethin Chief Justice said:
By the time Gott was released, his weak health had been broken by the harsh conditions of his imprisonment.
He died on 4 November 1922, at the age of 56.