Denis George

Denis George (c.1751 – 1821) was an Irish judge who held office as Recorder of Dublin, and then as Baron of the Court of Exchequer (Ireland). He enjoyed a high reputation among his contemporaries for integrity and benevolence.[1]

Personal life

He was born in Dublin, third son of Denis George of St. Stephen's Green, whose country estate was at Clophook near Stradbally in County Laois, and his wife Sarah Young. His eldest brother Sir Rupert George became an Admiral, and was the first of the George baronets.[2]

Denis married Dorothea Moore, daughter of Edward Moore of Moorefoot, County Tipperary in 1785, and they had two daughters.[3] She died in 1814. He retired from the Bench in 1821 and died at his home, Coldblow House in Donnybrook, Dublin the same year.[4]

Career

Denis graduated as Bachelor of Arts from the University of Dublin in 1773, entered Middle Temple in 1774 and was called to the Irish Bar in 1776. He was a commissioner in bankruptcy, became Recorder of Dublin in 1785 and a Baron of the Exchequer in 1794.[5]

He was frequently called on to sit on special commissions to deal with political crime, notably after the Rebellion of 1798, the Irish Rebellion of 1803 (which was led by Robert Emmet) and the agrarian unrest caused by a secret society called The Threshers in 1806.[6]. His speech of welcome for the new Lord Mayor of Dublin, Henry Hutton, in 1803 shows how profoundly the Emmet Rising had shaken the ruling class,[7] although he concluded optimistically that "the foul rebellion which disgraced our streets" had been defeated by firm Government action.[8]

Reputation

Even the harshest critics of the Irish judiciary at that time had nothing but praise for George: he was described as a man of stainless reputation and of "unrivalled humanity".[9] There is an agreeable description of George and his wife wandering the grounds of Coldblow House each autumn to pick blackberries.

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gollark: (Apparently you can maybe get somewhat better performance from image recognition neural networks by feeding them "DCT" things which also conveniently happen to be what JPEG images contain, but almost nobody does this?)
gollark: Also that.
gollark: The image is just 3 matrices of R/G/B values.
gollark: There are 129057189471894718247141491807401825701892912 random details and things but that's the gist of it.

References

  1. Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 John Murray London 1926 Vol.1 p.229
  2. Cokayne Complete Baronetage Reprinted Gloucester 1983 Vol. V, p. 405
  3. Cokayne, p. 405
  4. Ball, p. 229
  5. Ball p.229
  6. Ball p.229
  7. Address by William Walker Recorder of Dublin and Mr. Baron George's Charge Dublin John Exshaw 1804
  8. "Address by William Walker...." p.16
  9. Ball p.255
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