
William Shee
Sir 'William Shee' (
24 June,
1804 –
1868) was an
Anglo-Irish politician,
lawyer and
judge, the first
Roman Catholic judge to sit in
England and Wales since the
Reformation.
Early life and legal career
Shee was born in
Finchley. His father, Joseph, was a
merchant from
Thomastown,
County Kilkenny,
Ireland, his mother, Teresa ''née'' Darell.
Nicholas Wiseman was a cousin. He was initially educated at the school for
French refugees founded by the
Abbé Carron in
Somers Town and where
Hughes Felicité Robert de Lamennais taught. In
1818 he joined Wiseman as a student at
St. Cuthbert's College, Ushaw. He also attended
Edinburgh University where he joined
The Speculative Society. In
1823 he became a
pupil of
Thomas Chitty at
Lincoln's Inn and was
called to the bar in
1828.
[1]
Shee enjoyed a successful career as a
barrister, being made
serjeant-at-law in
1840, receiving a
patent of precedence in
1845, and being appointed
queen's serjeant in
1857. In
1837, he married Mary Gordon (died 1861) and their children included
George Darell Shee and Henry Gordon Shee
QC who became
Recorder of
Burnley and a judge in
Salford.
Shee's famous cases as an advocate included the
Roupell case and leading the unsuccessful defence of
poisoner
William Palmer in
1856.
In the latter case the defence case suffered adverse comment from the judge because Shee had, against all rules and conventions of professional conduct, told the
jury that he personally believed Palmer to be innocent.
[2] He edited a great number of legal publications.
Politics
:''See also
Roman Catholicism in Great Britain:The Catholic Revival in the Nineteenth Century''.
Shee was a champion of
Catholic Emancipation and addressed a
protestant rally held on
Pennenden Heath,
Maidstone as early as 24 November 1828. He failed in his first attempt to enter
parliament at the
1847 general election for
Marylebone but succeeded for
Kilkenny County in
1852.
He gave his
maiden speech on 12 November 1852 during the debate on the
Queen's Speech.
[3] Shee became active in
Irish tenants' rights.
William Sharman Crawford having failed to be re-elected in 1852, Shee took charge of, and reintroduced, his Tenant Right Bill on 25 Novemer 1852. In December, he spoke in support of Sir
Joseph Napier's Improvement Compensation Bill but both bills were rejected by a
select committee. Shee submitted an amended bill in Feruary
1854 but it fared poorly.
In June 1854 he failed in a controversial motion for leave to introduce a bill to amend the laws on the political administration of the
Church of Ireland, and to increase funds for Irish religious education and church building. In
1855, discouraged in his exertions as to reform, Shee consulted with Sharman Crawford and drafted a new Tenants' Improvement Compensation Bill, addressing some of the objections of the select committee. It fared no better than his earlier efforts. Shee's failure cost him the support of his voters and he lost his seat in the
1857 general election.
Shee was defeated in Kilkenny again in
1859 general election and declined judicial office in
Madras in
1860. He stood unsuccessfully in Stoke-on-Trent at a
by-election in September
1862.
Judge
On 19 December
1863, Shee was appointed judge of the
Queen's Bench, and
knighted the following year.
[4] He was the first Roman Catholic judge in England since the
Glorious Revolution of 1688. Shee died from
apoplexy at his home in
London.
References
1. Barker (2004)
2. Knott (1912) ''p.''267
3. Hansard 3, 123, 1852, 139–41
4. ''London Gazette'', 22 Dec 1863, 6645; ''London Gazette'', 14 June 1864, 3072
Bibliography
★ Barker, G. F. R. (2004) "Shee, Sir William (1804–1868)", rev. Hugh Mooney, ''
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press,
accessed 24 July 2007 (subscription required)
★
The Trial of William Palmer, Knott, G. H., , , William Hodge & Co., 1912,