Hiram Shaw Wilkinson Explained

Honorific-Prefix:Sir
Hiram Shaw Wilkinson
Office:British Crown Advocate for China
Term Start:1881
Term End:1897
Predecessor:Nicholas John Hannen
Successor:Hiram Parkes Wilkinson
Office2:Judge, British Court for Japan
Term Start2:1897
Term End2:1900
Predecessor2:Robert Mowat
Successor2:Court closed
Office3:Chief Justice, British Supreme Court for China and Corea
Term Start3:1900
Term End3:1905
Predecessor3:Nicholas John Hannen
Successor3:Havilland de Sausmarez
Birth Date:1840 6, df=yes
Death Place:Tobermore, Northern Ireland

Sir Hiram Shaw Wilkinson, JP, DL (1840–1926) was a leading British judge and diplomat, serving in China and Japan. His last position before retirement was as Chief Justice of the British Supreme Court for China and Corea.

Early life

Hiram Shaw Wilkinson was born on 13 June 1840, the son of John Wilkinson Esq., of Belfast and Annabella Shaw, daughter of William Shaw, Esq., of Holden's Valley, County Down.

In 1864, he married Prudie Gaffikin, the daughter of Thomas Gaffikin, Esq., of Belfast. He had two sons, Hiram Parkes Wilkinson, and the Reverend Thomas Gaffikin Wilkinson, both of whom were born in Yokohama, Japan. His wife died in 1870 in Yokohama. Wilkinson never remarried.

Wilkinson was educated at Queen's College, Belfast, earning a B.A. in 1864 and LL.D. in 1881.

Career

Wilkinson entered Her Majesty's Consular Service in Japan in 1864, as a student interpreter. Wilkinson spoke fluent Japanese as a result of this time in consular service.[1]

In 1872, Hiram Shaw Wilkinson was admitted to the bar of the Middle Temple. He would go on to serve in several legal and judicial offices in the Far East.

By 1876 Wilkinson was serving as 1st Assistant and interpreter at the British Consulate in Yedo (now Tokyo) as well as a Visiting Judge of the British Consular Court in Kanagawa. In 1877 he was appointed Acting Law Secretary of the British Supreme Court for China and Japan to be based in Yokohama.[2] From 1879 to 1880 he acted as an Assistant Judge of the same court in Shanghai.

In 1882, he was appointed Crown Advocate of the Supreme Court based in Shanghai. In his position as Crown Advocate, Wilkinson, was requested to take on the responsibility of being the lead prosecutor of Edith Carew for the murder of her husband in 1896 in Yokohama. Soon after, he was appointed Judge of the British Court for Japan to succeed Robert Mowat. He was the final judge of that court which was wound down in 1900 after extraterritorial rights came to an end in Japan. He then, in 1900, was appointed Chief Justice of the British Supreme Court for China and Corea succeeding Sir Nicholas Hannen who died that year.

Wilkinson served in the consular service in Japan at the same time as Ernest Satow, the first British student interpreter in Japan and later British Minister in Japan and then China. In later years, Satow described his advice as excellent and pushed for his appointment as Judge of the British Court for Japan and Chief Justice of the British Supreme Court for China and Japan.[3]

Wilkinson was knighted for his services in 1903. In 1905, Sir Hiram retired from the bench in Shanghai, and moved to the townland of Moneyshanere, outside Tobermore, modern-day Northern Ireland. He was succeeded by Sir Havilland de Sausmarez.

His son, Hiram Parkes Wilkinson succeeded him as Crown Advocate in Shanghai and served in that position until 1925, meaning that father and son held the position for 44 years.

Positions held

During his career in the Far East, Wilkinson held the following positions.

Later life

Wilkinson served as Pro-Chancellor of Queen's College, Belfast from 1914 until his death in 1926. In 1917, he was invited by Lloyd George to join the Irish Convention. On 18 November 1918, The Belfast Telegraph records Hiram Shaw Wilkinson donating money towards a field of battle monument dedicated to those of the 36th Ulster Division that had sacrificed their lives in World War I. In March 1922 he would receive threats from the IRA. He was also a Justice of the Peace (J.P.) and Deputy Lieutenant (D.L.) for County Londonderry.

Death

Wilkinson died on 27 September 1926 in Tobermore. He was buried in the Kilcronaghan parish church graveyard in Tobermore next to his son Thomas.

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. See Hansard HL Deb 27 September 1909 vol 3 cc361-83 at 364–5 on the role of student interpreter and their expected proficiency in the language they learn
  2. The Japan Gazette Official Directory for 1876 and 1877
  3. The Semi-official Letters of British Envoy Sir Ernest Satow from Japan and China (1895–1906), Edited by Ian Ruxton, 1997, p175