- Hartley Shawcross, Baron Shawcross
Hartley William Shawcross, Baron Shawcross, GBE, PC, KC (
4 February 1902 –10 July 2003 ), was a Britishbarrister andpolitician and the lead British prosecutor at the Nuremberg War Crimes tribunal.Early life
Hartley William Shawcross was born to John and Hilda Shawcross in Germany, whilst his father was teaching English at Giessen University. He was educated at
Dulwich College , theLondon School of Economics andUniversity of Geneva and sat for the Bar atGray's Inn , where he won first-class honours. He was the youngest man ever to be madeKing's Counsel .Career
He joined Labour at a young age, and served as
Member of Parliament for St Helens from 1945 to 1958, holding the position ofAttorney-General from 1945 to 1951. It was in 1946 when debating the repeal of anti-Union laws in the House of Commons that Shawcross made the "We are the masters at the moment" comment (widely misquoted as "We are the masters now") that came to haunt him.As
Attorney-General , he prosecutedWilliam Joyce ("Lord Haw-Haw") andJohn Amery for treason and also prosecutedKlaus Fuchs andAlan Nunn May , for giving atomic secrets to theSoviet Union andJohn George Haigh (the acid bath murderer) for murder. He was knighted in 1945 and named Chief Prosecutor for the United Kingdom atNuremberg . From 1945 to 1949, he was Britain's principal United Nations delegate, though he was recalled in 1948 to lead for the government's interest at theLynskey tribunal . In 1951, he briefly served asPresident of the Board of Trade until the Labour government's defeat in the election of that year. He ended his law career the same year, and was expected to become a Tory earning him the nickname "Sir Shortly Floorcross". Instead though he resigned from Parliament in 1958, saying he was tired of party politics. He was made one of Britain's first life peers onFebruary 14 ,1959 as Baron Shawcross, [ [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20030711/ai_n12699961/pg_3 Obituary: Lord Shawcross | Independent, The (London) | Find Articles at BNET.com ] ] of Friston in the County of Sussex, and sat in theHouse of Lords as across-bencher . Because of this change of loyalties away from Labour, his many business interests and, much later, his support for theSocial Democratic Party (UK) , the 'Floorcross' nickname in the end rang true.In 1957, he was among a group of eminent British lawyers who founded
JUSTICE , the human rights and law reform organisation and he became its first chairman - a position he held until 1972.He was also instrumental in the foundation of the
University of Sussex and served as chancellor of the university from 1965 to 1985.Family
Lord Shawcross was married three times. His first wife Alberta Rosita Shyvers (m. May 24, 1924) suffered from
multiple sclerosis and committed suicide on December 30, 1943. His second wife Joan Winifred Mather (m. September 21, 1944) died in a riding accident on the Sussex Downs on January 26, 1974. At the age of 95 he married Mrs. Susanne Monique Huiskamp on April 18, 1997 inGibraltar .He had two sons, the
author andhistorian William Shawcross , Hume Shawcross, and a daughter, Dr Joanna Shawcross, by his second wife. He died at home atCowbeech, East Sussex at the age of 101, the last surviving member ofClement Attlee 's government.hawcross and the Nuremberg Trials
Shawcross's advocacy before the Nuremberg Trial was passionate. His most famous line was:
:"There comes a point when a man must refuse to answer to his leader if he is also to answer to his own conscience."
He avoided the crusading style of American, Russian and French prosecutors. Shawcross's opening speech, which lasted two days, sought to undermine any belief that the Nuremberg Trials were victor's
justice (an exactedvengeance against defeated foes). Instead, he focused on therule of law and he demonstrated that the laws that the defendants had broken, expressed in international treaties and agreements, were those to which pre-warGermany had been a party. In his closing speech, he ridiculed any notion that any of the defendants could have remained ignorant of the thousands of Germans exterminated because they were old or mentally ill. He used the same argument for the millions of other people "annihilated in the gas chambers or by shooting" and he maintained that each of the 22 defendants was a party to "common murder in its most ruthless forms".Thus Shawcross' advocacy was instrumental in obtaining convictions against the remaining Nazi leadership, on grounds which were perceived as fair and lawful.
Controversy
Bodkin Adams case
During the committal hearing for the suspected
serial killer John Bodkin Adams in February 1957, Shawcross was seen dining with the defendant's lover,Roland Gwynne , at the White Hart Hotel inLewes Cullen, Pamela V., "A Stranger in Blood: The Case Files on Dr John Bodkin Adams", London, Elliott & Thompson, 2006, ISBN 1-904027-19-9, P.633] . They were accompanied by Lord Chief Justice Goddard, who had already selectedPatrick Devlin as judge for Adams' trial and then later phoned Devlin while thejury was considering its verdict, to recommend that Adams was given bail before a second trial for another count of murder. While driving home afterwards, Gwynne crashed his car. He hadn't been drinking. Adams wasacquit ted but was suspected by police of killing 163 of his patients.Later, on 10 May 1957, Goddard heard a
contempt of court case againstNewsweek andW. H. Smith . On April 1 during Adams' trial, they had respectively published and distributed an issue of the magazine containing two paragraphs of material "highly prejudicial to theaccused ", saying that Adams' victim count could be "as high as 400". Each company was fined £50. Goddard made no mention of hisconflict of interest .Other cases
During a rent tribunal case he referred to certain workers as "six black niggers". [ [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20030711/ai_n12699961/pg_2 Obituary: Lord Shawcross | Independent, The (London) | Find Articles at BNET.com ] ]
References
Bibliography
* cite book | author=Shawcross, H. | title=Life Sentence | year=1995 | id=ISBN 0094749809 | publisher=Constable | location=London
External links
[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20030711/ai_n12699961 Obituary, "The Independent", July 11, 2003 by James Morton]
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