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BARON HENRY HAWKINS BRAMPTON (1817-1907)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 418 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BARON HENRY HAWKINS BRAMPTON (1817-1907)  ,
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English judge, was born at
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Hitchin, on the 14th of September 1817 . He received his
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education at
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Bedford school . The son of a
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solicitor, he was early familiarized with legal principles . Called to the bar at the
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Middle Temple in 1843, he at once joined the old home circuit, and after enjoying a lucrative practice as a junior, took
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silk in 1859 . His name is identified with many of the famous trials of the reign of Queen Victoria . He was engaged in the Simon Bernard case (of the Orsini plot celebrity), in that of Roupell v . Waite, and in the Overend-Gurney prosecutions . The two causes celebres, however, in which Hawkins attained his highest legal distinction were the Tichborne trials and the
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great will case of Sugden v . Lord St Leonards . In both of these he was victorious . In the first his masterly
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cross-examination of the witness Baigent was one of the great featuresof the trial . He did a lucrative business in references and arbitrations, and acted for the royal commissioners in the
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purchase of the site for the new law courts. election petitions also formed another branch of his extensive practice .

Hawkins was raised to the

bench in 1876, and was assigned to the then
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exchequer division of the High Court, not as baron (an appellation which was being abolished by the Judicature Act), but with the title of
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Sir Henry Hawkins . He was a great advocate rather than a great lawyer . His searching voice, his manner, and the variety of his facial expression, gave him an enormous influence with juries, and as a cross-examiner he was seldom, if ever, surpassed . He was an excellent judge in chambers, where he displayed a clear and vigorous grasp of details and questions of fact . His knowledge of the criminal law was extensive and intimate, the reputation he gained as a "
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hanging " judge making him a terror to evil-doers; and the court for
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crown cases re-served was never considered
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complete without his assistance . In 1898 he retired from the bench, and was raised to the peerage under the title of Baron Brampton . He frequently took
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part in determining House of Lords appeals, and his judgments were distinguished by their lucidity and 'grasp . He held for many years the office of counsel to the
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Jockey Club, and as an active member of that
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body found relaxation from his legal and judicial duties at the leading
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race meetings, and was considered a capable judge of horses . In 1898 he was received into the
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Roman Catholic Church, and in 1903 he presented, in conjunction with Lady Brampton (his second wife), the
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chapel of SS . Augustine and Gregory to the Roman Catholic
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cathedral of Westminster, which was consecrated in that
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year . In 1904 he published his Reminiscences . He died in
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London on the 6th of
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October 1907, and Lady Brampton in the following year .

End of Article: BARON HENRY HAWKINS BRAMPTON (1817-1907)
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