Charles Barry (judge)

{{short description|South African judge}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{Infobox officeholder

|honorific-prefix = The Honourable

|name = Charles Barry

|honorific-suffix = KC

|image =

|imagesize =

|smallimage =

|alt =

|caption =

|order =

|office =

|term_start =

|term_end =

|order1 =

|office1 = Judge President of the Transvaal Provincial Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa

|term_start1 = 1943

|term_end1 = 1947

|deputy1 =

|predecessor1 = Leopold Greenberg

|successor1 = Gerrie Maritz

|office2 = Judge of the Transvaal Provincial Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa

|term_start2 = 1927

|term_end2 = 1943

|birthname = Charles Edward Barry

|birth_date = {{Birth date|df=y|1877|9|30}}

|birth_place = Sea Point, Cape Colony

|death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1956|4|11|1877|9|30}}

|death_place = Pretoria, South Africa

|restingplace =

|restingplacecoordinates =

|citizenship =

|nationality =

|party =

|otherparty =

|spouse =

|partner =

|relations =

|children =

|residence =

|alma_mater = Trinity College, Oxford

|occupation =

|profession = Advocate

|signature =

|signature_alt =

|website =

|footnotes =

}}

Charles Edward Barry KC (30 September 1877 – 11 April 1956) was a South African judge who served as Judge President of the Transvaal Provincial Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa.

Early life and education

Barry was born Sea Point, Cape Town, his father, James Michael Barry, was a Cape attorney and his mother, Johanna Philippina Kuhnhardt, was a celebrated linguist.{{Cite book|last=GISA|title=South African Family Registers 2018|date=2019|publisher=Genealogical Institute of South Africa|page=540|location=Stellenbosch}}National Archives of South Africa. 1956. Barry, Charles Edward. Death Notice. TAB MHG 2404/56

Barry received his education in Europe, first in Heidelberg, Germany, and then at St Paul's School, London. After his schooling, he went on to Trinity College, Oxford, where in 1900 he earned his BA in Classics. While at Oxford he also excelled in sports, such as cricket, rowing and he captained the university's first rugby team.{{Cite book|last=Beyers|first=C. J.|title=Dictionary of South African biography: Vol V|publisher=Human Sciences Research Council|year=1987|location=Pretoria|pages=34}}

Career

After university he worked in London for a steamship company, studying law part-time. In 1904 he was admitted to the Inner Temple and next year he returned to South Africa and joined the Pretoria Bar. He took silk in December 1922 and in June 1926 received an acting judge appointment at the Transvaal Provincial Division. Barry was appointed puisne judge of the Transvaal Provincial Division of the Supreme Court on 1 March 1927, and he became judge president in 1943. He retired in September 1947.{{Cite book|last=Kahn|first=Ellison|title=Law, life & laughter encore : legal anecdotes & portraits from Southern Africa|date=1999|publisher=Juta & Co|isbn=0-7021-4577-7|location=Kenwyn|pages=32|oclc=42398148}}

See also

References