- Thomas Strangman
Sir Thomas Joseph Strangman QC (
7 January 1873 –8 October 1971 ) was a Britishbarrister who spent much of his career inIndia .Strangman was educated at
Charterhouse School andTrinity Hall, Cambridge and wascalled to the bar by theMiddle Temple in 1896. He practised inBombay , where he was a member of the Legislative Council and was appointed Advocate-General of Bombay in 1914. In this role he was the first lawyer to successfully prosecuteGandhi . He was knighted in the 1920 New Year Honours. [LondonGazette |issue=31712 |date=30 December 1919 |startpage=3 |supp=yes]In 1922 he returned to England and attempted to enter politics for the Conservative Party, unsuccessfully contesting Crewe in 1923 and Wolverhampton East in 1924. He then returned to practise in Bombay.
In about 1929 he returned to England permanently and specialised in Indian appeals before the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council . He was highly successful in this practice andtook silk in 1938. He became abencher ofLincoln's Inn in 1944.He was also at various times chairman of the
Eastern Bank , theBanque Belge pour l'Etranger , theShanghai Electric Corporation and theSingapore Traction Company .Footnotes
References
*Obituary, "
The Times ",12 October 1971
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