William de Grey, 1st Baron Walsingham

William de Grey, 1st Baron Walsingham PC KC (7 July 1719 – 9 May 1781), was a British lawyer, judge and politician. He served as Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas between 1771 and 1780.

Merton Hall - de Grey family seat in Norfolk
Arms of Grey, Barons Walsingham: Barry of six argent and azure, in chief three annulets gules; crest: A wyvern's head or; supporters: Two wyverns regardant argent collard azure chained or and charged on the breast with three annulets gules; motto: Excitari Non Herescere ("to be spirited not inactive") [1]

de Grey was the third son of Thomas de Grey, MP, of Merton, Norfolk, and Elizabeth Windham, daughter of William Windham. He was the younger brother of another Thomas de Grey. The de Grey family had been settled in Norfolk since the 14th century. He was educated at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, was called to the Bar, Middle Temple, in 1742, and became a King's Counsel in 1758.[2] Between 1761 and 1763 he was Solicitor General to Queen Charlotte.

de Grey entered Parliament for Newport, Cornwall, in 1761, a seat he held until 1770, and then represented Cambridge University from 1770 to 1771, and held office under George Grenville and Lord Rockingham as Solicitor-General between 1763 and 1766 and under William Pitt the Elder, the Duke of Grafton and Lord North as Attorney-General between 1766 and 1771. He failed to secure the conviction of Henry Sampson Woodfall for the publication of one of the Letters of Junius, which was deemed by the Crown to be a seditious libel; the jury thought otherwise and Lord Mansfield declared a mistrial.[3]

In 1771 de Grey was appointed Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, a post he held until 1780, when he was forced to resign due to ill health. He had been knighted in 1766 and on his retirement in 1780 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Walsingham, of Walsingham in the County of Norfolk.[4]

Lord Walsingham married Mary, daughter of William Cowper, in 1743. They had one son and a daughter. He died in May 1781, aged 61, and was succeeded in the barony by his only son Thomas. Lady Walsingham died in 1800.

Principal cases

Notes

  1. Debrett's Peerage & Baronetage. 2000.
  2. "De Grey, William (GRY736W)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. State Trials XX, 895
  4. "No. 12122". The London Gazette. 26 September 1780. p. 2.
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gollark: It's not very robust.
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References

Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
John Lee
Richard Bull
Member of Parliament for Newport, Cornwall
1761–1770
With: Richard Bull
Succeeded by
Richard Bull
Richard Henry Alexander Bennet
Preceded by
Thomas Townshend
Charles Yorke
Member of Parliament for Cambridge University
1770–1771
With: Thomas Townshend
Succeeded by
Thomas Townshend
Richard Croftes
Political offices
Preceded by
Sir Fletcher Norton
Solicitor-General
1763–1766
Succeeded by
Edward Willes
Preceded by
Charles Yorke
Attorney-General
1766–1771
Succeeded by
Edward Thurlow
Legal offices
Preceded by
Sir John Eardley Wilmot
Chief Justice of the Common Pleas
1771–1780
Succeeded by
The Lord Loughborough
Peerage of Great Britain
New creation Baron Walsingham
1780–1781
Succeeded by
Thomas de Grey

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