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WRENFORDSLEY, SIR HENRY THOMAS (c. 1835-1908), chief justice
of Western Australia, |
the son of Joseph H. Wren was born probably about the year 1835, and was
educated in France and at Trinity College, Dublin. He was called to the bar of
the Middle Temple in 1863, and for a time was a junior counsel for the privy
council office. He acted at times as a county court judge in England and in 1877
was appointed a puisne judge at Mauritius. He was also procureur and
advocate-general, and was prominent in connexion with the passing of a labour
law, the preparation and publication of a magisterial code, and the introduction
of reforms in the supreme court. In 1880 he was appointed chief justice of
Western Australia where he assisted in revising the local statutes and prepared
and published rules of procedure. He was then appointed chief justice of Fiji
and judicial commissioner for the Western Pacific. His stay in Fiji was short as
he found the climate unsuitable, and from February to June 1883 he became
acting-governor of Western Australia. In 1884 he was an acting-judge of the
supreme court of Tasmania, and took a similar position at Melbourne in 1888. In
the following year he was appointed acting chief justice at Perth. He became
chief justice of the Leeward Islands in 1891, and held the position until his
retirement in 1902. He died at Antibes in the south of France on 2 June 1908. He
was knighted in 1883.
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