'James Robert Hope-Scott' (
July 15,
1812 -
April 29,
1873) was an
English barrister and
Tractarian.
Early life and conversion
Born at
Great Marlow,
Berkshire and
christened 'James Robert Hope', he was the third son of Sir Alexander Hope, and grandson of
John Hope, 2nd Earl of Hopetoun. After a childhood spent at the
Royal Military College, Sandhurst, of which his father was commander, he was educated at
Eton College and
Christ Church, Oxford, where he was a contemporary and friend of
William Ewart Gladstone and
John Henry Newman. In 1838 he was
called to the bar at
Lincoln's Inn. Between
1840 and
1843 he helped to found
Trinity College,
Glenalmond.
In 1840-41 he spent some eight months in
Italy,
Rome included, in company with his close friend
Edward Louth Badeley.
On his return he became, with Newman, one of the foremost promoters of the
Tractarian movement at
Oxford and entirely in Newman's confidence.
[1] In 1841, he published an attack on the
Anglican-German Bishopric in Jerusalem, and further defended the "value of the science of
canon law, in a pamphlet.
[2][3] Edward Bouverie Pusey also valued Hope's advice and canvassed him in
1842 before publishing the ''Letter to the Archbishop of Canterbury on some Circumstances connected with the Present Crisis in the Church''. Hope supported publication.
Along with other
Anglo-Catholics, Hope was disturbed by the
Gorham judgment and, on 12 March
1850, a meeting was held at his house in
Curzon Street,
London which was attended by fourteen leading Tractarians including: Badeley,
Henry Edward Manning and
Archdeacon Robert Isaac Wilberforce. They eventually published a series of resolutions
[4] which started the process of distancing Hope, Badeley, Manning and Wilberforce from the
Anglican Church.
[5]
In
1851 Hope was received with Manning into the
Roman Catholic Church.
Legal practice
On 15 June
1841, Hope wrote to Gladstone:
[6]
Ormsby believed
that Hope found some distraction from his frustration with the Anglican Church through his secular work.
By
1839, Hope was becoming involved in parliamentary work. He was retained as counsel for the British government on the
Foreign Marriages Bill and in in
1843, the report on the
Consular Jurisdiction Bill. His brother's appointment as Under Secretary of State for the Colonies in Sir
Robert Peel's administration may have opened some doors. In 1843-44 he was engaged again by the government in the matter of the aftermath of the
Pastry War, whose settlement Britain had
arbitrated, to prepare a report on some points in dispute between
France and
Mexico.
As an established
ecclesiastical lawyer, he was much involved in the
Ecclesiastical Courts Bill in 1843 and the same year he took the
DCL degree at Oxford. In
1844 an
English Criminal Code was under serious consideration and
Bishop of London Charles James Blomfield recommended Hope to the
Lord Chancellor John Copley, 1st Baron Lyndhurst as a commissioner to consider offences
against religion and the Church.
By the end of
1845 he stood at the head of the parliamentary bar
but his objections to taking the
Oath of Supremacy detered him from accepting the professional honour of
Queen's Counsel. In
1849, he therefore asked
Lord Chancellor Charles Pepys, 1st Earl of Cottenham for, and was granted, a
patent of precedence conferring equal status.
In
1852 he gave Newman the disastrously misleading legal advice that he was unlikely to be sued for
libel by
Giacinto Achilli, advice that led to Newman's criminal conviction for
defamatory libel. Therafter, Newman relied on Badeley for legal advice
[7] though in
1855 Hope-Scott conducted the negotiations which ended in Newman's accepting the
rectorship of the
Catholic University of Ireland.
Personal and family life
In
1847 he married Charlotte Harriet Jane Lockhart, daughter of
John Gibson Lockhart and granddaughter of Sir
Walter Scott, and, on her coming into possession of
Abbotsford House six years later, he assumed the surname of 'Hope-Scott'.
[8] After her death on
26 October 1858 he married as his second wife in 1861,
Lady Victoria Fitzalan-Howard, daughter of the
14th Duke of Norfolk.
He retired from the bar in
1870 and spent the rest of his life in charitable and literary work,
[9] in particular an abridgment of his father in law's seven volume biography of Scott with a preface dedicated to Gladstone.
[10] He maintained a life-long correspondence with Badeley.
Both his wives died in childbirth.
He left an only daughter by his first marriage, Mary Monica (born
2 October 1852), later wife of Joseph Constable Maxwell, third son of
William, Lord Herries. Two other children of this marriage died in infancy. By his second marriage he left a son,
James Fitzalan Hope-Scott (1870-1949), and three daughters. Two other children died young.
[11]
References
1. [Anon.] (1911) "James Hope-Scott", ''Encyclopedia Britannica''
2. Ornsby (1884) Ch.XVIII
3. Hope (1842)
4.
5. Ornsby (1884) Ch.XXI
6. Ornsby (1884) Ch.XXII
7. Courtney (2004)
8. [Anon.] (1911) "John Gibson Lockhart", ''Encyclopedia Britannica''
9. Boothman (1913)
10. Lockhart (1871)
11. Murphy (2004)
Bibliography
★
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★ Obituaries:
★
★ ''
The Scotsman'', 8 May 1873
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★ ''Edinburgh Courant'', 8 May 1873
★
★ ''
The Tablet'', 10 May 1873
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★ ''Law Times'', 10 May 1873
★
★ ''The Month'', '19' (1873), 274–91
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★
★
★ Courtney, W. P. (2004) "Badeley, Edward Lowth (1803/4–1868)", rev. G. Martin Murphy, ''
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press,
accessed 22 July 2007 (subscription required)
★
★ Murphy, G. M. (2004) "Scott, James Robert Hope- (1812–1873)", ''
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, online edn, Oct 2006
accessed 23 July 2007
★