Vicary Gibbs

For other people named Vicary Gibbs, see Vicary Gibbs (disambiguation).
Sir Vicary Gibbs

Sir Vicary Gibbs PC KC (27 October 1751 – 8 February 1820) was an English judge and politician. He was known for his caustic wit, which won for him the sobriquet of "Vinegar Gibbs".

Early life and education

Gibbs was the first surviving son of George Abraham Gibbs, a surgeon and apothecary of Exeter, and his wife Anne Vicary. He attended Eton from 1764 until 1771 and obtained a BA at King's College, Cambridge. During this period, he was a devoted classical scholar, a King's Scholar at Eton and a Craven scholar at King's College.[1]

He was a fellow of King's from 1774 until 1784, when he married Frances Cerjat Mackenzie, the sister of Lord Seaforth. This marked the end of his classical career, although he had as early as 1769 shown himself committed to the law by enrolment at Lincoln's Inn; nonetheless, he remained fond of classical literature and English drama throughout his life.

Gibbs's unpleasant voice, disagreeable temper, and jejune pedigree presented formidable handicaps at the start of his career. He initially employed himself as a special pleader, in which capacity he developed a good professional reputation, and was called to the bar in 1783. He proved successful, if acidulous, as an advocate, and powerful in marshaling evidence. He unsuccessfully defended William Winterbotham for sedition in 1793, but so impressed John Horne Tooke that he was retained as junior counsel to Erskine in the successful defence of Tooke and Hardy in autumn 1794. Gibbs' abilities were already being courted by the government, leading to his appointment as recorder of Bristol that February. His efforts during the trial of Tooke and Hardy impressed Sir John Scott, the prosecutor, and Gibbs took silk in December.

Politics

The Pitt ministry continued to court him, and he held legal office for the Prince of Wales from 1795 until 1805. Furthermore, in 1804, he obtained the post of Chief Justice of Chester. As part of the Welsh circuit, this post did not debar him from being returned as Member of Parliament for Totnes in December. He was made Solicitor General in February 1805 and knighted; however, he left office in favour of Sir Arthur Piggott after Pitt's death in January 1806.

Hostile to Grenville, he lost his seat at Totnes, but the formation of the second Portland government in 1807 saw him made Attorney General and returned to Parliament for Great Bedwyn. In the 1807 general election, he defeated Lord Henry Petty to become member for Cambridge University. Under the Portland and Perceval ministries, he was noted for his zealous activities against publishers of seditious libels. In the House of Commons, his most significant activity occurred in 1809, during the inquiry into military corruption and the activities of Mary Anne Clarke, mistress of the Duke of York. However, her adroit response to his examination delighted the press, many members of whom had suffered from Gibbs's activities. His caustic tongue did not make him a favourite among the House, and his principles were quite conservative.

Judge

Sir Vicary Gibbs as Chief Justice of the Common Pleas

In May 1812, he resigned as Attorney General, accepting an appointment as a puisne judge in the Court of Common Pleas. This may have been the result of poor health; Henry Brougham attributed it to personal anxiety after the assassination of Perceval. In any case, Gibbs accepted a great reduction in income to do so, although his appointment as Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer in November 1813 somewhat eased this. He was, at the same time, sworn of the Privy Council. In February 1814, another promotion made him Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. His tenure there was characterised by a thorough mastery of law, although opinions vary as to whether his temper had by this time been checked. Probably the most celebrated case he heard was the libel action brought by Lady Frances Webster and her husband over the allegation ( almost certainly untrue) that she had an affair with the Duke of Wellington.[2] A further decline in health led to his resignation in November 1818, and he died on 8 February 1820 at his house in London, later being interred in the Churchyard of St. Mary the Virgin in Hayes, Bromley.

References

  1. "Gibbs, Vicary (GBS771V)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. Longford, Elizabeth, Wellington- Elder Statesman ,Weidenfeld and Nicholson ,London ,1972

Sources

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
William Adams
John Berkeley Burland
Member of Parliament for Totnes
1804–1806
With: William Adams
Succeeded by
William Adams
Benjamin Hall
Preceded by
Viscount Stopford
James Henry Leigh
Member of Parliament for Great Bedwyn
1807
With: James Henry Leigh
Succeeded by
James Henry Leigh
Sir John Nicholl
Preceded by
Earl of Euston
Lord Henry Petty
Member of Parliament for Cambridge University
1807–1812
With: Earl of Euston 1807–1811
Viscount Palmerston 1811–1812
Succeeded by
Viscount Palmerston
John Henry Smyth
Legal offices
Preceded by
John Anstruther
Solicitor-General of the Duchy of Cornwall
1795–1800
Succeeded by
Thomas Manners-Sutton
Preceded by
Robert Graham
Attorney-General of the Duchy of Cornwall
1800–1805
Succeeded by
William Adam
Preceded by
James Mansfield
Chief Justice of Chester
1804
Succeeded by
Robert Dallas
Preceded by
Sir Thomas Manners-Sutton
Solicitor General
1805–1806
Succeeded by
Sir Samuel Romilly
Preceded by
Sir Arthur Piggott
Attorney General
1807–1812
Succeeded by
Sir Thomas Plumer
Preceded by
Sir Archibald Macdonald
Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer
1813–1814
Succeeded by
Sir Alexander Thomson
Preceded by
Sir James Mansfield
Chief Justice of the Common Pleas
1814–1818
Succeeded by
Sir Robert Dallas
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