HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Sir Anthony Brutus Babington
PC (NI) PC or pc may refer to: Arts and entertainment * Player character or playable character, a fictional character controlled by a human player, usually in role-playing games or computer games * ''Port Charles'', an American daytime TV soap opera * ...
(24 November 1877 – 10 April 1972) was an Anglo-Irish barrister, judge and politician.


Early life

Babington was born in 1877 to Hume Babington JP (son of The Rev. Hume Babington), a landowner of 1,540 acres,''Burke's Landed Gentry of Ireland'', 1958, 4th Edition by L. G. Pine,
Burke's Peerage Burke's Peerage Limited is a British genealogical publisher founded in 1826, when the Irish genealogist John Burke began releasing books devoted to the ancestry and heraldry of the peerage, baronetage, knightage and landed gentry of Great ...
: 'Babington of Creevagh', p. 42
and Hester ( Watt; sister of
Andrew Alexander Watt Andrew Alexander Watt, JP, DL (4 November 1853 – 11 October 1928) was an Anglo-Irish landowner and businessman with a net worth of over £900,000 at his death in 1928, worth £51.8 million in 2016. Early life He was born in 1853 to Samuel Watt ...
) at Creevagh House, County Londonderry. He was educated at Glenalmond School, Perthshire and Trinity College, Dublin, where he won the Gold Medal for Oratory of the College Historical Society in 1899. Babington was born into the Anglo-Irish Babington family that arrived in Ireland in 1610 when
Brutus Babington The Rt Rev. Brutus (or Brute) Babington (1558-1611) was an Englishman who became the Church of Ireland Bishop of Derry. Life He was the son of Richard Babington and Anne Starkey (formerly of Wrenbury Hall).Burke's Irish Landed Gentry by Bernar ...
was appointed
Bishop of Derry The Bishop of Derry is an episcopal title which takes its name after the monastic settlement originally founded at Daire Calgach and later known as Daire Colm Cille, Anglicised as Derry. In the Roman Catholic Church it remains a separate title, b ...
. Notable relations include
Robert Babington Robert John Babington, DSC, QC (9 April 1920 – 17 September 2010) was an Ulster Unionist Party politician, who served as the member of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland for North Down from 1969 to 1972, and a county court judge. He w ...
, William Babington,
Benjamin Guy Babington Benjamin Guy Babington (5 March 1794 – 8 April 1866) was an English physician and epidemiologist. Life He was born on 5 March 1794, the son of the physician and mineralogist William Babington (1756–1833) and his wife, Martha Elizabeth (née ...
and
James Melville Babington Lieutenant General Sir James Melville Babington (31 July 1854 – 15 June 1936) was a British Army officer and a renowned leader of cavalry, making a name for himself for his actions in the Second Boer War. He was Commander of the New Zealand De ...
and author
Anthony Babington Anthony Babington (24 October 156120 September 1586) was an English gentleman convicted of plotting the assassination of Elizabeth I of England and conspiring with the imprisoned Mary, Queen of Scots, for which he was hanged, drawn and quartere ...
.


Political and legal career

Babington was called to the Irish Bar in 1900. He briefly lectured in Equity at King's Inns, and it was during this time, in 1910, that he re-arranged and re-wrote R.E. Osborne's ''Jurisdiction and Practice of County Courts in Ireland in Equity and Probate Matters''. He
took silk In the United Kingdom and in some Commonwealth countries, a King's Counsel (post-nominal initials KC) during the reign of a king, or Queen's Counsel (post-nominal initials QC) during the reign of a queen, is a lawyer (usually a barrister or a ...
in 1917.Babington, Sir Anthony Brutus
/ref> He moved to the newly established
Northern Ireland Northern Ireland ( ga, Tuaisceart Éireann ; sco, label= Ulster-Scots, Norlin Airlann) is a part of the United Kingdom, situated in the north-east of the island of Ireland, that is variously described as a country, province or region. Nort ...
in 1921 and practised as a barrister until his election to the
House of Commons of Northern Ireland The House of Commons of Northern Ireland was the lower house of the Parliament of Northern Ireland created under the '' Government of Ireland Act 1920''. The upper house in the bicameral parliament was called the Senate. It was abolished w ...
as the
Ulster Unionist Party The Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) is a unionist political party in Northern Ireland. The party was founded in 1905, emerging from the Irish Unionist Alliance in Ulster. Under Edward Carson, it led unionist opposition to the Irish Home Rule m ...
member for South Belfast in
1925 Events January * January 1 ** The Syrian Federation is officially dissolved, the State of Aleppo and the State of Damascus having been replaced by the State of Syria. * January 3 – Benito Mussolini makes a pivotal speech in the Itali ...
and subsequent appointment as
Attorney General for Northern Ireland The Attorney General for Northern Ireland is the chief legal adviser to the Northern Ireland Executive for both civil and criminal matters that fall within the devolved powers of the Northern Ireland Assembly. The Attorney General for Northern Ire ...
the same year in the cabinet of Lord Craigavon. His appointment to the
Privy Council of Northern Ireland The Privy Council of Northern Ireland is a formal body of advisors to the sovereign and was a vehicle for the monarch's prerogative powers in Northern Ireland. It was modelled on the Privy Council of Ireland. The council was created in 1922 as ...
in 1926 entitled him to the style "The Right Honourable". From 1929 Babington was the MP for Belfast, Cromac, the South Belfast constituency having been abolished. He was made an
honorary bencher A bencher or Master of the Bench is a senior member of an Inn of Court in England and Wales or the Inns of Court in Northern Ireland, or the Honorable Society of King's Inns in Ireland. Benchers hold office for life once elected. A bencher ca ...
of the
Middle Temple The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple, commonly known simply as Middle Temple, is one of the four Inns of Court exclusively entitled to call their members to the English Bar as barristers, the others being the Inner Temple, Gray's Inn ...
in 1930. Babington resigned from politics in 1937 upon his appointment as a Lord Justice of Appeal and was knighted in the 1937 Coronation Honours. In 1947, he chaired the Babington Agricultural Enquiry Committee, named in his honour, which was established in 1943 to examine agriculture in Northern Ireland. hort, Brian. 2014. The Battle of the Fields: Rural Community and Authority in Britain During the Second World War, p. 334/ref> The committee's first recommendation under Babington's leadership was that Northern Ireland should direct all its energies to the production of livestock and livestock products and to their efficient processing and marketing. Babington retired from the judiciary in 1949, taking up the chairmanship of the Northern Ireland Transport Tribunal, which existed until 1967, established under the Ulster Transport Act - promoting a car-centred transport policy - and which was largely responsible for the closure of the
Belfast and County Down Railway The Belfast and County Down Railway (BCDR) was an Irish gauge () railway in Ireland (later Northern Ireland) linking Belfast with County Down. It was built in the 19th century and absorbed into the Ulster Transport Authority in 1948. All but th ...
. Babington endorsed the closure on financial grounds and was at cross purposes with his co-chair, Dr James Beddy, who advised against the closure, citing the disruption of life in the border region between the north and the south as his primary reason in addition to financial grounds. ennedy, M. 2000. Division and Consensus: The Politics of Irish Cross-border Relations, 1925-1969, p. 141/ref> Babington also chaired a government inquiry into the licensing of clubs, the proceeds of which resulted in new regulatory legislation at Stormont.


Renaming Northern Ireland as 'Ulster'

Babington, whilst Attorney-General, was a proponent of renaming Northern Ireland as "Ulster".''The Irish Times'', 20 November 1937 reporting on a speech given by the Attorney General on Monday, 15 November 1937. Babington was critical of the newly proposed Irish constitution, in which the name of the Irish state was changed to 'Ireland', laying claim to jurisdiction over Northern Ireland. He said: Babington continued by saying that it was of "great importance" that the "cumbersome name" of Northern Ireland that came into the Act of 1920 alongside Southern Ireland should be changed. He continued further remarking that "The name of Southern Ireland has been changed and it was time that the name of Northern Ireland should be changed to Ulster".


View on Irish unity

Michael McDunphy, Secretary to the President of Ireland (then
Douglas Hyde Douglas Ross Hyde ( ga, Dubhghlas de hÍde; 17 January 1860 – 12 July 1949), known as (), was an Irish academic, linguist, scholar of the Irish language, politician and diplomat who served as the first President of Ireland from June 1938 t ...
), recalled
Ernest Alton Ernest Henry Alton (21 September 1873 – 18 February 1952) was an Irish university professor and an Independent Teachta Dála (TD) and Senator. Born near Mullingar, County Westmeath, Alton attended The High School in Dublin. He graduated fro ...
's correspondence with Babington on the question of
Irish unity United Ireland, also referred to as Irish reunification, is the proposition that all of Ireland should be a single sovereign state. At present, the island is divided politically; the sovereign Republic of Ireland has jurisdiction over the maj ...
, in which Alton and Babington were revealed to be at cross purposes. The discussion was used as an example by Brian Murphy, in ''Forgotten Patriot: Douglas Hyde and the Foundation of the Irish Presidency'', as an example of the office of the Irish President becoming embroiled in an initiative involving Trinity College Dublin and a senior Northern Ireland legal figure, namely Babington. Babington had written to Alton, then
Provost of Trinity College, Dublin The following persons have been provost of Trinity College Dublin. References {{University of Dublin, Trinity College Trinity College, Dublin , name_Latin = Collegium Sanctae et Individuae Trinitatis Reginae Elizabethae juxt ...
, expressing his view that, as Murphy summarises, "... Severance between the two parts of Ireland could not continue, that it was the duty of all Irishmen to work for early unification and that in his opinion Trinity College was a very appropriate place in which the first move should be made." urphy, Brian. 2016. Forgotten Patriot: Douglas Hyde and the Foundation of the Irish Presidency./ref> When Alton arrived to meet with Hyde, it emerged, after conversing with Hyde's secretary McDunphy, that he and Babington were at cross purposes. "It soon became clear that the united Ireland contemplated by Mr icJustice Babington of the Northern Ireland Judiciary was one within the framework of the British Commonwealth of Nations, involving recognition of the King of England as the Supreme Head, or as Dr Alton put it, the symbol of unity of the whole system," wrote McDunphy.


Personal life

On 5 September 1907, he married Ethel Vaughan Hart, daughter of George Vaughan Hart KC LLD, of
Howth Howth ( ; ; non, Hǫfuð) is an affluent peninsular village and outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland. The district as a whole occupies the greater part of the peninsula of Howth Head, which forms the northern boundary of Dublin Bay, and includes ...
, County Dublin (the son of Sir Andrew S. Hart) and his wife Mary Elizabeth Hone, a scion of the
Hone family The Hone family is an Anglo-Irish family dating back to the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland when Samuel Hone arrived with the Parliamentary army in 1649. The family is believed to be of Dutch extraction, although no connection to the Netherlands ha ...
. They had three children: *Mary Hume Babington (5 June 1908 – 24 February 2003), who married
T.G. Wilson Thomas George Wilson FRCSI FRCSE FRCS FACS FRSM MRIA HRHA (1 July 1901 – 6 November 1969) was an eminent Anglo-Irish surgeon and medical administrator specialising in otorhinolaryngology, a field to which he made significant contribution ...
in 1928 *Emerson Hume Babington of Troy Hall, Londonderry (17 January 1910 – 1989), Crown Solicitor for the City and County of Londonderry *Ruth Babington (24 October 1912 – 1999)Burke's Irish Family Records, 1976, pg 271 He was a member of the
Apprentice Boys of Derry The Apprentice Boys of Derry is a Protestant fraternal society with a worldwide membership of over 10,000, founded in 1814 and based in the city of Derry, Northern Ireland. There are branches in Ulster and elsewhere in Ireland, Scotland, Engla ...
. From 1926 to 1952, he was a member of the board of governors of the
Belfast Royal Academy The Belfast Royal Academy (commonly shortened to ) is the oldest school in the city of Belfast, Northern Ireland. It is a co-educational, non-denominational voluntary grammar school in north Belfast. The Academy is one of 8 schools in Northern ...
. He served as warden (chairman) of the board from 1941 to 1943. Through his efforts the school acquired the Castle Grounds from Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 9th Earl of Shaftesbury in 1934. Babington was a keen golfer. He was an international golfer from 1903 to 1913, during which he was runner-up in the Irish Amateur Golf Championships in 1909 and one of the Irish representatives at an international match in 1913.Lord Justice Babington Biography
/ref> The Babington Room in the
Royal Portrush Golf Club Royal Portrush Golf Club is a private golf club in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. The 36-hole club has two links courses, the Dunluce Links (the championship course) and the Valley Links. The former is one of the courses on the rota of the Ope ...
is named after him, as is the 18th hole on the course as a result of the key role he played in shaping its history.'The Royal Portrush Golf Club 1897–1955 by the Rt. Hon. Sir Anthony B. Babington PC QC'


Publications

*''Jurisdiction and Practice of County Courts in Ireland in Equity and Probate Matters'' (Dublin: E Ponsonby, 1910) ith R.E. Osborne


References


External links

* http://www.election.demon.co.uk/stormont/biographies.html {{DEFAULTSORT:Babington, Anthony 1877 births 1972 deaths Alumni of Trinity College Dublin Irish barristers British King's Counsel Knights Bachelor Ulster Unionist Party members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1925–1929 Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1929–1933 Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland 1933–1938 Members of the Privy Council of Northern Ireland Attorneys General for Northern Ireland Northern Ireland junior government ministers (Parliament of Northern Ireland) Lords Justice of Appeal of Northern Ireland People educated at Glenalmond College
Anthony Anthony or Antony is a masculine given name, derived from the '' Antonii'', a ''gens'' ( Roman family name) to which Mark Antony (''Marcus Antonius'') belonged. According to Plutarch, the Antonii gens were Heracleidae, being descendants of Anton, ...
Members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland for Belfast constituencies