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John Jeffreyson

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Sir John Jeffreyson (1635-1700) was an English-born judge whose entire judicial career was spent in Ireland; he was unusual among Irish judges of the time in holding the rank of English Serjeant-at-law. He was considered an outstanding lawyer, and was noted for his staunchly Tory politics.[1]

He was born in Durham, son of John Jeffreyson, a mercer, and Margaret Walton.[2] He went to school in Guisborough and matriculated from St John's College, Cambridge in 1652. He entered Gray's Inn in 1651 and was called to the Bar in 1661. He became Recorder of Durham in 1679, bencher of Gray's Inn in 1682 and Serjeant in 1683.

He was a staunch Tory in politics and a close friend of the noted loyalist Thomas Cartwight, Bishop of Chester, but after the Glorious Revolution, unlike Bishop Cartwright, he did not follow King James II into exile.[3] He strongly supported the King's policy of religious toleration, and was recommended for promotion to the High Court bench in 1688 as a reward for his good service to the Crown.[4]

His career was not permanently damaged by the Glorious Revolution. Perhaps surprisingly, given his record of loyalty to the previous regime, he was sent to Ireland as a judge of the Court of Common Pleas (Ireland) in 1690: presumably his long experience and legal ability were thought to outweigh his Tory opinions. He joined the King's Inn and was knighted in 1692: he was made a member of the Privy Council of Ireland in 1693. His political views led to conflict at a time when the Irish Bench was riven with political differences:[5] he was removed from the Privy Council in 1695 but restored to his place on it in 1697. In the same year he acted as Commissioner of the Great Seal of Ireland. He died in 1700 and was buried in St. Peter's Church, Aungier Street, Dublin (which was demolished in 1983.).[6]

He married Elizabeth Cole of Gateshead in 1664; they had one daughter, Margaret, who married Captain Walker.[7] Margaret was a friend of the Irish-born author, Mary Davys, who dedicated her first novel, The Amours of Alcippus and Lucippe, later renamed The Lady's Tale (1704) to Margaret. Mrs Davys in the dedication praises Margaret's "unexceptional temper", and refers to their old acquaintance in England, suggesting that their friendship was of long standing..[8]

Elrington Ball described Jeffreyson as a fine lawyer, but a Tory above all .[9]

References

  1. ^ Ball, F.Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 London John Murray and Co 1926 Vol. 2 pp.58-9
  2. ^ Ball p.58
  3. ^ Ball p.59
  4. ^ Walker, Peter James II and the Three Questions : Religious Toleration and the Landed Classes 1687-1688 Peter Lang International Academic Publishers Bern 2010 p.207
  5. ^ Ball pp.12-3
  6. ^ Ball p.59
  7. ^ Ball p.59
  8. ^ Bowden, Martha, introduction to The Reform'd Coquet by Mary Davys, reissued by the University of Kentucky 1999
  9. ^ Ball pp.11-2