Sir Charles Frederic Belcher | |
Honorific-Suffix: | OBE |
Office: | Chief Justice of Trinidad and Tobago |
Term Start: | 1930 |
Term End: | 1937 |
Predecessor: | Philip James Macdonell |
Successor: | Charles Cyril Gerathy |
Office2: | Chief Justice of Cyprus |
Term Start2: | 1927 |
Term End2: | 1930 |
Predecessor2: | Sir Sidney Charles Nettleton |
Successor2: | Sir Herbert Cecil Stronge |
Birth Date: | 11 July 1876 |
Birth Place: | Geelong, Colony of Victoria |
Death Place: | Kokstad, Natal South Africa |
Restingplace: | Kokstad Cemetery |
Spouse: | Sara Visger (married 1908-1965) |
Alma Mater: | Trinity College, Melbourne |
Sir Charles Frederic Belcher OBE (11 July 1876 – 7 February 1970) was an Australian lawyer, author, British colonial jurist, and amateur ornithologist.[1]
Born in Geelong, Victoria, C. F. Belcher was a son of G. F. Belcher, a former member of the Legislative Council of Victoria. He was educated at Geelong Grammar School,[2] and entered Trinity College, Melbourne in 1894, where he studied law.[3] He was first called to the bar in Melbourne in 1902. In 1907 he moved to London, England to enroll at Gray's Inn, and was called to the bar in 1909.[4]
For much of his life he served the British Colonial Service in Africa and elsewhere. He served variously as Magistrate in Uganda (1914), Assistant Judge in Zanzibar, Puisne Judge in Kenya, Member of the Appeals Court of East Africa, Attorney General (1920-1923) and later High Court Judge (1924-1927)[5] of Nyasaland, and Chief Justice of Cyprus (1927–1930). In 1930, he was appointed Chief Justice of Trinidad and Tobago and President of the Appeal Court of the West Indies, offices he held until his retirement in 1937.
He was a founding member of both the Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union (RAOU) in 1901, and the Bird Observers Club in 1905. He was elected a Fellow of the RAOU in 1949. In June 1931, he received a knighthood in the 1931 King's Birthday Honours as a Knight Bachelor.[6] His son, engineer William Redmond Morrison Belcher, served during the Spanish Civil War as a driver for the British Medical Aid Committee and later as a militiaman in the Centuria Malatesta.[7]