- George Lynskey
Sir George Justin Lynskey (
5 February ,1888 –21 December ,1957 ) was an Englishjudge , particularly remembered for his role in investigating thepolitical scandal that led to the eponymousLynskey tribunal .Early life
Lynskey was born in
Knotty Ash ,Liverpool , the son ofsolicitor George Jeremy (1861-1921) who had himself been born inIreland and sat onLiverpool City Council asalderman representing theIrish National League . Lynskey had three younger brothers and two sisters and was educated at St. Francis Xavier's College then at theUniversity of Liverpool . He earned anLLB (1907) andLLM (1908). He entered his father's practice as a solicitor in 1910, marrying Eileen Mary Prendiville in 1913. The couple had two daughters.Bryson (2004)]The bar
In 1920 Lynskey took up the profession of a
barrister , beingcalled to the bar by theInner Temple . He practised on the northern circuit, building up one of the largest provincial practices of the time and becoming aKC in 1930. David Maxwell Fyfe, a future prosecutor at theNuremberg Trials was one of his pupils and praised Lynskey's geniality and conviviality. He became abencher of the Inner Temple in 1938 and a judge of theSalford Hundred Court of Record in 1937.enior judicial career
In 1944 a provincial barrister educated at a
redbrick university with little exposure to theLondon bar or specialist practice, no matter how successful, was an unusual appointment for aHigh Court judge . However, he was appointed to theKing's Bench and became an effective but unfailingly courteous judge in criminal trials at variousassizes aroundEngland and Wales . In 1945, he sat withLord Chief Justice Lord Goddard and Mr Justice Humphreys in theCourt of Criminal Appeal inWilliam Joyce 'sappeal against his conviction fortreason duringWorld War II . The court rejected Joyce's appeal. [ cite news | work=The Times | date=8 November 1945 | pages=2, col D | title=Law Report, Nov. 7 Court Of Criminal Appeal, Joyce's Appeal Dismissed, "Rex v. Joyce" ] His most prominent role was as chair of the 1948 eponymous tribunal into alleged corruption amonggovernment minister s andcivil servant s. Lynskey won high praise for his handling of the inquiry but declined appointment asLord Justice of Appeal when offered byWilliam Jowitt, 1st Earl Jowitt .Personality and death
Lynskey was comfortable with
popular culture , a keen follower ofsport , especiallycricket and football. He supportedEverton F.C. [ [Anon.] (1948)] and, during the tribunal, was minded to correct Attorney-GeneralHartley Shawcross as to the date the football season had ended. [ cite book | author=Wade Baron, S. | title=The Contact Man: The Story of Sidney Stanley and the Lynskey Tribunal | year=1966 | publisher=Secker & Warburg | location=London | pages=83 ]After completing an assize in
Manchester in 1957, he collapsed withcoronary thrombosis and died soon after inManchester Royal Infirmary . Lynskey was a devoutRoman Catholic and ArchbishopWilliam Cardinal Godfrey officiated at hisrequiem mass . He was buried atBrooklands cemetery ,Weybridge , on 31 December.Honours
*
Rupert Bremner gold medal of theLaw Society (1910);
*LLD , University of Liverpool (1951).References
Bibliography
*Obituaries
**"The Times ",23 December 1957
**"Law Times",3 January 1958
**"St Francis Xavier's College Magazine" (1957)----
* [Anon.] (1948) " [http://www.lynskey.com/Projects/England/Reference/LYNSKEY,%20Sir%20George.htm The Bribes Tribunal Judge is Every Inch an Irishman] ", "Sunday Pictorial", December 12th
*Bryson, G. (2004) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/34649 Lynskey, Sir George Justin (1888–1957)] ", "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, accessed 21 July 2007 ODNBsub
* cite book | author=Waller, P. J. | title=Democracy and Sectarianism: A Political and Social History of Liverpool, 1868–1939 | year=1981 | publisher=Liverpool University Press | location=Liverpool | id=ISBN 0853230749
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.