Thomas Bucknill
Sir Thomas Townsend Bucknill (18 April 1845 – 4 October 1915)[1] was an English judge of the Victorian and Edwardian eras, a Member of Parliament and a Privy Councillor.[2] Biography'Tommy' Bucknill was born at Exminster in 1845, the second son of Sir John Charles Bucknill,[1] an asylum doctor and psychiatrist who was knighted in 1894 in recognition of his services as one of the founders of the Volunteer Movement.[3] Thomas Bucknill was educated at Westminster School and afterwards at Geneva.[1] He was called to the bar in 1868, became a Queen's Counsel in 1885, and a bencher of the Inner Temple in 1891.[1] From 1885 to 1899 he was Recorder of Exeter.[1] He edited The Cunningham Reports and Sir S. Cook's Common Pleas Reports,[3] and was a leading Counsel on the Admiralty Circuit and on the Western Circuit.[3] He sat as the Conservative Member of Parliament[1] for Epsom from 1892 to 1899, in which year he was raised to the bench, succeeding Sir Henry Hawkins, and was knighted.[1] In 1914 he was appointed a Privy Councillor.[2] Bucknill was a prominent Freemason, having been initiated in 1873 into Lodge of Good Report No.136 and becoming the Provincial Grand Master for Surrey from 1903 to 1915.[4] Among the notable cases tried before Bucknill was that in 1912 of poisoner Frederick Seddon, who, on being found guilty of murder appealed directly to Bucknill as a brother Mason and in the name of 'The Great Architect Of The Universe' to overturn the jury's verdict. According to some sources he gave the First Degree sign, according to others the Sign of Grief and Distress, begging for mercy.[4] Bucknill is reported as having said, with some emotion:
Bucknill died at Hylands House, Epsom on 4 October 1915.[5] He was the father of Sir Alfred Townsend Bucknill (1880–1963), also a High Court Judge and who became a Privy Councillor in 1945 and John Alexander Strachey Bucknill who served as Chief Justice of the Straits Settlements and Puisne Judge in Patna, India. Arms
Portrayals
Notes
External links
|