Arthur Salter (judge) explained

Sir Arthur Salter
Office:Justice of the High Court
Birth Date:30 October 1859
Termstart:1917
Termend:30 November 1928
Office1:Member of Parliament
for Basingstoke
Termstart1:1906
Termend1:1917
Predecessor1:Arthur Frederick Jeffreys
Successor1:Auckland Geddes
Predecessor:Sir Frederick Low
Successor:Sir Malcolm Macnaghten
Birth Name:Arthur Clavell Salter

Sir Arthur Clavell Salter (30 October 1859 – 30 November 1928) was a British Conservative Party politician and judge who sat on the King's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice.

Early life and education

Born to Dr Henry Hyde Salter, FRS (1823–71) and his wife Henrietta, Salter was educated at Wimborne Grammar School and King's College London, where he studied arts and law. He married Mary Dorothea (d. 1917) in 1894, daughter of Major J. H. Lloyd. Him and Mary had a daughter and a son, 2nd Lieutenant John Henry Clavell Salter, who was killed in action in World War 1 in 1918.[1] After Mary's death, he married Nora Constance, of Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Heathcote Ouchterloney.[2]

Career

He was called to the Bar in 1885 by the Middle Temple, and joined the western circuit in the following year. He became a King's Counsel in 1904 and was elected as a Member of Parliament for Basingstoke in 1906, where he sat until his appointment as a High Court Judge in 1917, and sat on the Kings Bench Division. He also served as the Recorder of Poole from 1904 to 1917. During his tenure, he sat on a number of high-profile cases such as that of Horatio Bottomley in 1922, an MP. He served on the High Court until his death on 30 November 1928.[3] [4] [5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Record search . WW1 War Memorial London . 18 July 2022.
  2. Obituary. Mr Justice Salter . The Solicitors Journal . 8 December 1928 . 72 . 49 . 821.
  3. Oxford DNB article: Salter, Sir Arthur Clavell. 2004. 10.1093/ref:odnb/35918. 2023-02-22.
  4. Book: Who's Who 1925 . 1925 . A & C Black.
  5. Web site: Sir Arthur Clavell Salter (1859 - 1928) . The Commercial Court of England & Wales . 18 July 2022.