James Cochrane (judge) explained

Sir James Cochrane
Office:Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Gibraltar
Term Start:1841
Term End:1877
Successor:Anthony Dudley
Birth Date:1798
Birth Place:Nova Scotia
Death Place:Glen Rocky, Gibraltar
Nationality:British
Parents:Thomas Cochran
Augusta Jane Allan
Spouse:Theresa Haly
Relations:Thomas Cochran (brother)
Children:Thomas Cochrane
Occupation:Lawyer
Profession:Judge

Sir James Cochrane (1798 – 24 June 1883), was Chief Justice of Gibraltar. One of the most notable cases he handled was the enquiry into the Mary Celeste. Judge's Cave in Gibraltar is named for him.

Early life

Cochrane was the son of Thomas Cochrane, speaker of the House of Assembly of Nova Scotia, and was born there in 1798. Among his large family was his elder half-sister, Margaret Cochran, the wife of Sir Rupert George, the Commodore for the Royal Navy's North America Station. Two other sisters were Elizabeth Cochran (wife of Rt. Rev. John Inglis, Bishop of Nova Scotia)[1] and Isabella Cochran (wife of Dean Edward Bannerman Ramsay).[2] His brother was Thomas Cochran, who served as the third Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island[3] and later in Upper Canada where he perished in Lake Ontario in 1804.[4]

Career

He was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1829 and he became the Attorney General of Gibraltar in 1837. He was replaced in that position by the Irish attorney Marcus Costello when he was made chief justice there on the 3 July 1841.[5] He was knighted in 1845.[6]

During his time in Gibraltar he presided over the Vice Admiralty Court in December 1872 which enquired into the fate of the Mary Celeste, a ship that was found abandoned at sea without any rational explanation.[7]

Cochrane resigned in 1877 after serving as Chief Justice for thirty-six years. On that occasion General Lord Napier of Magdala, Governor of the fortress, said of him:

Personal life

Cochrane had married Theresa in 1829, daughter of Colonel William Haly, who died in 1873. He died at Glen Rocky, his house in Gibraltar, on 24 June 1883, leaving one son, the Rev. Thomas Cochrane, rector of Stapleford Abbotts in Essex.[6] He is buried at Witham's Cemetery in Gibraltar.[8]

When Cochrane was first appointed, he had a villa constructed during the 1840s and whilst it was being built a cave was discovered. Judge's Cave took its name from Cochrane. The cave was of some importance as it contained human remains and early visitors to the cave included Abbe Henri Breuil, George Busk and local investigater William Willoughby Verner Cole.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Eaton . Arthur Wentworth Hamilton . The Church of England in Nova Scotia and the Tory Clergy of the Revolution . 1891 . T. Whittaker . 236 . 12 October 2020 . en.
  2. Book: Eaton, Arthur Wentworth Hamilton . Cochran-Inglis Family of Halifax . 1899 . Halifax . C.H. Ruggles & Co. .
  3. Book: David . Allison . David Allison (college president) . History of Nova Scotia . II . 1916 . Halifax . A.W. Bowen & Co . 823 .
  4. Book: Warburton, A.B. . Alexander Warburton . A History of Prince Edward Island: from its Discovery in 1534 until the departure of Lieutenant-Governor Ready in A.D. 1831 . 1923 . St. John, New Brunswick . Barnes & Co. . 424–426 .
  5. http://archive.spectator.co.uk/article/3rd-july-1841/10/jlitistellaneous Appointments
  6. Cochrane, James . Henry Morse . Stephens . 11 . 161-162.
  7. Book: Begg. ~Paul. Mary Celeste: The Greatest Mystery of the Sea. 22 July 2014. Routledge . 978-1317865308. 29 September 2014.
  8. Web site: Witham's (Sandpits) Cemetery. . 23 January 2024.
  9. Web site: Judge's Cave. Underground-Gibraltar.com. Gibraltar Museum. 19 January 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20140222173420/http://underground-gibraltar.com/#/judges-cave/4570277241. 22 February 2014. dead.