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1ST BARON RICHARD BETHELL WESTBURY (1...

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 536 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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1ST

BARON RICHARD BETHELL WESTBURY (1800-1873)  , lord chancellor of
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Great Britain, was the son of Dr Richard Bethell, and was born at Bradford, Wilts . Taking a high degree at Oxford in 1818, he was elected a
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fellow of Wadham College . In 1823 he was called to the bar at the
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Middle Temple . On attaining the dignity of queen's counsel in 184o he rapidly took the foremost place at the
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Chancery bar and was appointed
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vice-chancellor of the county palatine of Lancaster in 1851 . His most important public service was the reform of the then existing mode of legal
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education, a reform which ensured that students before call to the bar should have at least some acquaintance with the elements of the subject which they were to profess . In 1851 he obtained a seat in the House of
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Commons, where he continued to sit, first as member for
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Aylesbury, then as member for Wolverhampton, until he was raised to the peerage . Attaching himself to the liberals, he became
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solicitor-general in 1852 and attorney-general in 1856 and again in 1859 . On
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June 26, 1861, on the
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death of Lord Campbell, he was created lord high chancellor of Great Britain, with the title of Baron Westbury of Westbury, county Wilts . The ambition of his
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life was to set on
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foot the compilation of a
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digest of the whole law, but for various reasons this became impracticable . The conclusion of his tenure of the chancellorship was unfortunately marked by events which,although they did not render
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personal corruption imputable to him, made it evident that he had acted with some laxity and want of caution . Owing to the reception by parliament of reports of committees nominated to consider the circumstances of certain appointments in the Leeds Bankruptcy Court, as well as the granting a pension to a Mr Leonard Edmunds, a clerk in the patent office, and a clerk of the parliaments, the lord chancellor felt it incumbent upon him to resign his office, which he accordingly did on the 5th of
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July 1865, and was succeeded by Lord Cranworth . After his resignation he continued to take
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part in the judicial sittings of the House of Lords and the privy council until his death .

In 1872 he was appointed arbitrator under the

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European Assurance Society Act 1872, and his judgments in that capacity have been collected and published by Mr F . S . Reilly . As a writer on law he made no mark, and few of his decisions take the highest judicial rank . Perhaps the best known is the
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judgment delivering the opinion of the judicial committee of the privy council in 1863 against the heretical character of certain extracts from the well-known publication Essays and Reviews . His
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principal legislative achievements were the passing of the
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Divorce Act 1857, and of the
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Land Registry Act 1862 (generally known as Lord Westbury's Act), the latter of which in practice proved a failure . What chiefly distinguished Lord Westbury was the possession of a certain sarcastic humour; and numerous are the stories, authentic and apocryphal, of its exercise . In fact, he and Mr Justice
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Maule fill a position analogous to that of
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Sydney Smith, convenient names to whom " good things " may be attributed . Lord Westbury died on the loth of July 1873, within a day of the death of Bishop Wilberforce, his
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special antagonist in debate . See Life of Lord Westbury by T . A . Nash .

End of Article: 1ST BARON RICHARD BETHELL WESTBURY (1800-1873)
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