Hartley Williams

{{Short description|Australian judge}}

{{about|the Victorian judge|his contemporary, the Anglican priest in South Australia |Hartley Williams (clergyman)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}}

{{Use Australian English|date=August 2014}}

His Honour Sir Hartley Williams (15 October 1843 – 12 July 1929), was a Supreme Court of Victoria judge.

{{Australian Dictionary of Biography

|first=Robert |last=Miller

|title=Williams, Sir Hartley (1843–1929)

|id2=williams-sir-hartley-4856

|accessdate=31 October 2013}}

Williams was born in Collingwood, Victoria, the second son of Sir Edward Williams and his wife Jessie, Lady Williams, née Gibbon. He was educated at Repton School and Trinity College, Oxford, where he graduated in 1866. He entered as a student at the Inner Temple in January 1863, and was called to the Bar in April 1867. In the same year he returned to Victoria and was admitted a barrister of the Supreme Court of that colony in April 1868. He very quickly took a leading position as a common law pleader, and twice unsuccessfully contested St. Kilda for a seat in the Victorian Legislative Assembly in 1874. Subsequent to this he took no part in politics, but was raised to the Bench of the Supreme Court in July 1881.{{cite Australasia|Williams, His Honour Hartley}}

Williams retired in May 1903 and left the next month for England; he died in London on 12 July 1929.

Bibliography

  • {{Citation | title=Religion without superstition | author1=Williams, Hartley, Sir, 1843-1929 | year=1885 | publisher=George Robertson | language=English}} (quite contrary to the beliefs of his namesake){{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article77061152 |title=The Border Watch |newspaper=The Border Watch |volume=XXII |issue=2229 |location=South Australia |date=21 March 1885 |accessdate=19 November 2016 |page=2 |via=National Library of Australia}}

References