
George Archer-Shee (6 May 1895 – 31 October 1914) was a
Royal Navy cadet
A cadet is an officer trainee or candidate. The term is frequently used to refer to those training to become an officer in the military, often a person who is a junior trainee. Its meaning may vary between countries which can include youths in ...
whose case of whether he stole a five
shilling
The shilling is a historical coin, and the name of a unit of modern currencies formerly used in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, other British Commonwealth countries and Ireland, where they were generally equivalent to 12 pence o ...
postal order was decided in the
High Court of Justice in 1910. Archer-Shee was successfully defended by
barrister
A barrister is a type of lawyer in common law jurisdictions. Barristers mostly specialise in courtroom advocacy and litigation. Their tasks include taking cases in superior courts and tribunals, drafting legal pleadings, researching law and ...
and politician Sir
Edward Carson. The trial, which became a
British ''
cause célèbre'', was the inspiration for the 1946
Terence Rattigan play ''
The Winslow Boy'', which has been the basis of two films. Following his acquittal, the boy's family were paid
compensation in July 1911. Archer-Shee was commissioned in the
British Army in 1913, and killed aged 19, at the
First Battle of Ypres on 31 October 1914.
Family
George Archer-Shee was the son of Martin Archer-Shee and his second wife Helen Treloar. His father was an official at the
Bank of England
The Bank of England is the central bank of the United Kingdom and the model on which most modern central banks have been based. Established in 1694 to act as the English Government's banker, and still one of the bankers for the Government of ...
in Bristol and grandson of the painter
Sir Martin Archer Shee
Sir Martin Archer Shee (23 December 1769 – 13 August 1850) was an Irish portrait painter. He also served as the president of the Royal Academy.
Early life
He was born in Dublin, of an old Irish Roman Catholic family, the son of Martin Shee ...
. His half-brother was
Martin Archer-Shee
Sir Martin Archer-Shee CMG DSO (5 May 1873 – 6 January 1935) was a British army officer and Conservative Party politician.
Background
He was the son of Martin Archer-Shee (1846-1913) and his wife Elizabeth Edith Dennistoun (1851-1890) ( n� ...
, an army officer and Member of Parliament.
Actor
Robert Bathurst is his great nephew.
Theft

In January 1908 Archer-Shee became a cadet at the
Royal Naval College, Osborne
The Royal Naval College, Osborne, was a training college for Royal Navy officer cadets on the Osborne House estate, Isle of Wight, established in 1903 and closed in 1921.
Boys were admitted at about the age of thirteen to follow a course las ...
, at
Osborne House on the
Isle of Wight. The college, which was part of the estate of the late
Queen Victoria, educated and trained 14- to 16-year-olds in their first two years of officer training for a career in the Royal Navy. Further studies then continued at the
Royal Naval College, Dartmouth, in
Devon.
The
theft occurred on 7 October 1908, shortly after the start of the autumn term, when a cadet named Terence Hugh Back received a postal order from a relative for five shillings. On the same afternoon, Archer-Shee had been given permission to go to a post office outside the college grounds to buy a postal order and a stamp because he wanted to buy a model train costing fifteen shillings and
sixpence (15s 6d). On returning to the college, he discovered that Back had reported that his postal order had been stolen.
Miss Tucker, the elderly clerk at Osborne Post Office, was contacted. She produced Back's cashed postal order and stated that only two cadets had visited her that afternoon. However, she claimed the same cadet who had bought a postal order for 15s 6d was also the one who cashed the 5s order.
Legal defence

When the Admiralty wrote to Archer-Shee's father telling him that his son was being expelled for theft, his father instantly responded that "Nothing will make me believe the boy guilty of this charge, which shall be sifted by independent experts". The father's reaction reflected the family's values. They were devout
Roman Catholics
The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with 1.3 billion baptized Catholics worldwide . It is among the world's oldest and largest international institutions, and has played a ...
and the background in
banking meant all the sons had been brought up to regard misuse of money as sinful.
Martin Archer-Shee contacted several lawyers to help clear his son's name. He also contacted his son Major
Martin Archer-Shee
Sir Martin Archer-Shee CMG DSO (5 May 1873 – 6 January 1935) was a British army officer and Conservative Party politician.
Background
He was the son of Martin Archer-Shee (1846-1913) and his wife Elizabeth Edith Dennistoun (1851-1890) ( n� ...
, the half brother of George, who was active in politics (in 1910 he became
Member of Parliament for
Finsbury Central
Finsbury Central was a parliamentary constituency that covered the Clerkenwell district of Central London. It returned one Member of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, elected by the first past the ...
in North London). Major Archer-Shee obtained the services of Sir
Edward Carson, regarded as one of the
United Kingdom's best barristers of the age, who had a son at Osborne.
Trial and acquittal
Several problems prevented Carson from taking the case straight to court. Firstly as Archer-Shee was a naval cadet at the time, this excluded him from the
jurisdiction of a
civil court. Secondly as he was not enlisted in the Royal Navy, he was not entitled to a
court-martial
A court-martial or court martial (plural ''courts-martial'' or ''courts martial'', as "martial" is a postpositive adjective) is a military court or a trial conducted in such a court. A court-martial is empowered to determine the guilt of memb ...
. In order to help his client, Carson brought a
petition of right against the Crown to bring the matter before the courts.
The case eventually came to the High Court of Justice on 26 July 1910. The
Solicitor-General,
Sir Rufus Isaacs, appeared for the Crown and Carson, himself a former Solicitor-General, for Archer-Shee. Carson's opening remarks set the tone of the case:
Carson soon proved that the grounds on which the Admiralty had
dismissed Archer-Shee were unsubstantiated. The barrister successfully proved that the elderly postmistress, Miss Tucker, could easily have been mistaken. She admitted in court that all of the cadets looked alike, conceding that in the course of dealing with one cadet and her various other tasks and duties, another boy could have entered without her noticing. The court also heard Miss Tucker was unable to identify Archer-Shee among the other cadets when given the opportunity to do so.
On the fourth day of the trial, the Solicitor-General accepted the statement that George Archer-Shee did not cash the postal order "and consequently that he is innocent of the charge. I say further, in order that there may be no misapprehension about it, that I make that statement without any reserve of any description, intending that it shall be a complete justification of the statement of the boy and the evidence he has given before the court."
Compensation
Following the trial, the Archer-Shee family began to press the Admiralty to pay restitution. On 16 March 1911 the
First Lord of the Admiralty said that he thought the
House of Commons would think it inappropriate. Nevertheless, the family continued to press their claim, circulating a booklet presenting their side of the case. On 6 April, the Archer-Shee case was raised in the Commons during a Naval
Estimates debate. As most MPs supported compensation, the Admiralty was forced to concede to a judicial hearing to decide the matter, otherwise the business would be "lost" (a Parliamentary term meaning postponed, not dismissed, to a future day). Following the hearing,
John Charles Bigham, 1st Viscount Mersey
John Charles Bigham, 1st Viscount Mersey, (3 August 1840 – 3 September 1929) was a British jurist and politician. After early success as a lawyer, and a less successful spell as a politician, he was appointed a judge, working in commercial la ...
agreed the family should be paid £4,120 to cover their costs, and £3,000 compensation "in full settlement of all demands" (equivalent to £ in ). All monies were paid in July 1911.
Later life
After his expulsion as a naval cadet in 1908, Archer-Shee returned to the Roman Catholic
Stonyhurst College
Stonyhurst College is a co-educational Catholic Church, Roman Catholic independent school, adhering to the Society of Jesus, Jesuit tradition, on the Stonyhurst, Stonyhurst Estate, Lancashire, England. It occupies a Grade I listed building. Th ...
in
Lancashire, where he had been educated before going to Osborne Naval College. After completing his studies, he went to work at the
Wall Street
Wall Street is an eight-block-long street in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan in New York City. It runs between Broadway in the west to South Street and the East River in the east. The term "Wall Street" has become a metonym for t ...
firm of
Fisk & Robinson
Fisk & Robinson was one of the best-known bond houses in Wall Street in the early 20th century, dealing in United States Treasury security and bonds, New York City and other municipal bonds. It was prominently connected with the financing of rai ...
in New York. Having been a cadet sergeant in the
Officers' Training Corps at Stonyhurst, he joined the
British Army Special Reserve of Officers in 1913. With the outbreak of the
First World War in August 1914, Archer-Shee returned to Britain and served as a
lieutenant in the 3rd Battalion,
South Staffordshire Regiment. It was the same regiment that Sir Edward Carson's nephew Francis Robinson had joined shortly before.
Archer-Shee was killed, aged 19, at the
First Battle of Ypres in October 1914 while attached to the 1st Battalion, South Staffordshire Regiment. His name is inscribed on the war memorial in the village of
North Woodchester in Gloucestershire, where his parents lived. His name also appears on the roll of honour of "the men of St Mary’s school and congregation" displayed on the wall at the front of the Roman Catholic church of
St Mary on the Quay
St Mary on the Quay is a Roman Catholic Parish church in Bristol, England. It is situated on Colston Avenue, next to Colston Tower in the centre of the city. It is the oldest Roman Catholic church in Bristol; the first one built after the Refo ...
, Bristol. Robinson was killed three days before Archer-Shee.
Both their names are recorded on tablet 35 of the
Menin Gate in Ypres, as neither has a known grave.
Terence Back, the cadet whose postal order for five shillings was taken, served in the Royal Navy in both World Wars. He was made a
Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1944 and died in 1968.
Terence Back
/ref>
References and sources
;References
;Sources
*''The Archer-Shees against the Admiralty: the Story behind The Winslow Boy'' by Rodney M. Bennett
Rodney Martin Dumaresq Bennett (born 1934) is a broadcaster, writer, and local politician. He came from naval background; his father, Geoffrey Bennett, was a novelist and naval historian (he used the middle initial to avoid confusion with nam ...
(Robert Hale, London, 1973)
*''The Archer-Shee Case'' by Ewen Montagu (David and Charles, Newton Abbot, 1974)
External links
"A PETITION OF RIGHT: ARCHER-SHEE v. THE KING" in Penn Law Review
{{DEFAULTSORT:Archer-Shee, George
1895 births
1914 deaths
People educated at the Royal Naval College, Osborne
People educated at Stonyhurst College
Overturned convictions in the United Kingdom
South Staffordshire Regiment officers
British Army personnel of World War I
British military personnel killed in World War I