Montague Gore

His father, Reverend Charles Gore, vicar of Henbury, Cheshire, was the brother of William Gore-Langton.

[1] He matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford, 8 May 1818, aged 18, whereupon he became a student of Lincoln's Inn in 1821.

[2] Gore was returned to Parliament, as a Whig, as one of two representatives for Devizes in 1832, a seat he held until 1834.

[3] In that year, he took the Stewardship of the Chiltern Hundreds, having fallen out with the Whigs as part of the Derby Dilly.

He was the author among other works of Thoughts on the Present State of Ireland, published in 1848.