- Richard Webster, 1st Viscount Alverstone
Richard Everard Webster, 1st Viscount Alverstone, GCMG, QC (
December 22 ,1842 –December 15 ,1915 ) was a Britishbarrister ,politician andJudge who served in many high political and judicial offices. Webster was the second son of Thomas Webster QC. He was educated atKing's College School and Charterhouse, andTrinity College, Cambridge .He was well known as an athlete in his earlier years, having represented his university in the first Inter-Varsity steeplechase and as a runner, the Cambridge Alverstone Club being named in his honour. His interest in
cricket and foot-racing was maintained in later life. He refereed races for the early Amateur Athletic Club and set rules forlong jump andshot putt . He was President ofSurrey County Cricket Club from 1895 until his death and of theMarylebone Cricket Club in 1903.He was called to the bar in 1868, and became QC only ten years afterwards. His practice was chiefly in commercial, railway and patent cases until (June 1885) he was appointed Attorney-General in the Conservative Government in the exceptional circumstances of never having been Solicitor-general, and not at the time occupying a seat in parliament. He was elected for Launceston in the following month, and in November exchanged this seat for the Isle of Wight, which he continued to represent until his elevation to the
House of Lords . Except under the brief Gladstone administration of 1886, and the Gladstone-Rosebery cabinet of 1892–1895, Sir Richard Webster was Attorney-General from 1885 to 1900.In 1890 he was leading counsel for "
The Times " in the Parnell inquiry; in 1893 he represented Great Britain in theBering Sea arbitration; in 1898 he discharged the same function in the matter of the boundary betweenBritish Guiana andVenezuela ; and in 1903 was one of the members of theAlaska Boundary Commission.In the House of Commons, and outside it, his political career was prominently associated with church work; and his speeches were distinguished for gravity and earnestness.
In 1900 he succeeded Sir Nathaniel Lindley as
Master of the Rolls , being raised to the peerage as Baron Alverstone, and in October of the same year he was elevated to the office of Lord Chief Justice upon the death of Lord Russell of Killowen. He presided over some notable trials of the era includingHawley Harvey Crippen . Alverstone retired in 1913, and was created Viscount Alverstone.He died at
Cranleigh ,Surrey . He was buried atWest Norwood Cemetery under aCeltic cross . His peerages became extinct on his death.References
*1911
*"Wisden Cricketers' Almanack ", 1916 edition: obituary.
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