Roger Gale (antiquary)

Roger Gale
Member of Parliament
for Northallerton
In office
December 1705 – 1713
Preceded bySir William Hustler
Succeeded byLeonard Smelt
Preceded byRobert Dormer
Succeeded byHenry Peirse
Personal details
Born27 September 1672
Impington, Cambridgeshire, England
Died25 June 1744
Scruton, Yorkshire, England
Resting placeScruton, Yorkshire, England
Political partyWhig
SpouseHenrietta Roper
ChildrenRoger Henry Gale
Residence(s)Scruton, Yorkshire
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge University
Occupationwriter, antiquary

Roger Gale (27 September 1672 – 25 June 1744) was an English scholar and antiquary as well as a Whig politician who sat in the English and British House of Commons from 1705 to 1713. His father was an ecclesiastic and professor at Cambridge, which the younger Gale also attended. After his graduation, Gale briefly served as a diplomat in France, as well as holding a position as a reader at Oxford University's Bodleian Library. On his father's death in 1702, Gale retired to his family estate, but was elected to Parliament in 1705, where he served until 1713. He then continued in public service until 1735, when he once more retired to his estates.

Besides his governmental career, Gale was a member of the Society of Antiquaries and the Royal Society, where he served as treasurer. Gale was known as a collector of manuscripts and other antiquarian items, writing a few published works on those subjects. He donated his manuscript collection to his alma mater in 1738, and died in 1744. Although contemporaries felt he was one of the foremost scholars of his age, later historians have been less convinced, contrasting his learning unfavourably with his father's.