- John Bigham, 1st Viscount Mersey
John Charles Bigham, 1st Viscount Mersey (
3 August 1840 –3 September 1929 ) was a British jurist and politician. He is notable for heading the officialBoard of Trade inquiries into the sinking ofsteamship s, most notably the RMS "Titanic", the RMS "Lusitania", and the "Empress of Ireland .Biography
Bigham was born in
Liverpool , the son of a merchant. He studied law at theUniversity of London , then travelled toBerlin andParis to continue his education. Called to the bar in 1870 by theMiddle Temple , he practiced commercial law in and around his hometown. In 1883, Bigham was named aQueen's Counsel .In 1885, Bigham tried his hand at politics, running as a candidate for Parliament from
Toxteth , but lost. He was defeated again in 1892, this time running from the Liverpool Exchange constituency. He was finally elected on his third attempt in 1895; this time, however, he ran as aLiberal Unionist . However, he was never able to make much of a political impact, and his interest in politics was not much to begin with.In 1895, Bigham was named a judge to the
Queen's Bench while continuing his work in business law. He presided over the railway and canal commission of 1904, worked in the bankruptcy courts, and reviewedcourts-martial sentences handed down during theSecond Boer War . He joined the Probate, divorce and Admiralty division in 1909, but found the work unfulfilling and retired in 1910.Titanic
Two years later, Bigham received his greatest fame when he was appointed by Lord Loreburn, the
Lord Chancellor in the government of Prime MinisterHerbert Henry Asquith , to head the inquiry commission into the sinking of the RMS "Titanic". However, he received criticism for his oversight of this inquiry, as some felt he was biased towards the Board of Trade and the major shipping concerns, and cared less about finding out why the ship sank. In 1913, he presided over theInternational Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea , and added three more maritime inquiries to his resumé with his heading of the inquiries into the sinkings of the RMS "Empress of Ireland" (held inCanada in 1914) and the "Falaba" and "RMS Lusitania " in 1915.Peerage
In 1910, Bigham had been raised to the peerage as "Baron Mersey of Toxteth". He was created a
viscount in 1916. In his later years, Bigham was beset by deafness, but continued to work actively. He died atLittlehampton inSussex onSeptember 3 ,1929 .Lord Mersey's third son was Sir
Trevor Bigham , who becameDeputy Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis .References
*Rayment
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