Charles Jasper Selwyn

Charles Jasper Selwyn
Sir Charles Jasper Selwyn (standing) with his brother William.

Sir Charles Jasper Selwyn PC, QC (13 October 1813 – 11 August 1869), was an English lawyer, politician and Lord Justice of Appeal.

Contents

Background and education

Selwyn was born at Church Row, Hampstead, Middlesex, the third and youngest son of William Selwyn (1775–1855), and brother of George Augustus Selwyn, Bishop of Lichfield, and of William Selwyn (1806–1875), divine. He was educated at Ealing, Eton, and Trinity College, Cambridge, of which he was successively scholar and fellow. He graduated B.A. 1836, M.A. 1839, and LL.D. 1862.[1]

Political and legal career

Selwyn was called to the Bar, Lincoln's Inn, on 27 January 1840, practised chiefly before the Master of the Rolls, and amassed a large fortune. He served as Commissary to the university of Cambridge from 1855 to 1868, became a Queen's Counsel on 7 April 1856, and in the same year was made a bencher of his inn. He entered parliament as member for Cambridge University in April 1859, and sat for that constituency until 1868. He was a staunch conservative and a churchman. He first spoke in the house on the address to the queen on arming the volunteer corps [2], and on 13 August 1859 made a speech on a question of privilege connected with the Pontefract election inquiry.[3] In the same month he moved a resolution whereby the committee on the Stamp Duties Bill was enabled to introduce a clause extending probate duty to property exceeding one million in value,[4] and a few months later secured the rejection of Lewis Llewelyn Dillwyn's Endowed Schools Bill.[5]

Selwyn's speech on the motion for the second reading of the Ecclesiastical Commission Bill was considered his best.[6] He spoke for a long time against the bill, and moved an amendment to it. The bill was subsequently withdrawn after a three nights' debate. On 20 February 1861 he divided the house successfully by an amendment to the Trustees of Charities Bill.[7] One of his last speeches was on the Reform Bill of 1867, when he advocated that the lodger franchise should be extended to university lodgers in the town of Cambridge.[8]

Selwyn became Solicitor-General in Lord Derby's last administration on 18 July 1867, and was knighted on 3 August. Benjamin Disraeli appointed him a Lord Justice of Appeal on 8 February 1868, and he was named a Privy Counsellor on 28 March.

Family

Selwyn married, first, in 1856, Hester, fifth daughter of J. G. Ravenshaw, chairman of the East India Company, and widow of Thomas Dowler, M.D. He married, secondly, on 2 April 1869, Catherine Rosalie, daughter of Colonel Godfrey T. Greene, Royal Engineers, and widow of the Reverend Henry Dupuis, vicar of Richmond. He had a son and two daughters. Selwyn, in conjunction with L. F. Selwyn, wrote in 1847 Annals of the Diocese of New Zealand. He died at Pagoda House, Richmond, Surrey, on 11 August 1869, aged 55, and was buried in Nunhead Cemetery.

References

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Loftus Wigram
Spencer Horatio Walpole
Member of Parliament for Cambridge University
1859–1868
With: Spencer Horatio Walpole
Succeeded by
Spencer Horatio Walpole
Alexander Beresford Hope
Legal offices
Preceded by
Sir John Burgess Karslake
Solicitor-General for England and Wales
1867–1868
Succeeded by
Sir William Brett

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