Arthur William Piper (5 July 1865 – 19 February 1936) was a judge of the Supreme Court of South Australia
Piper was born at Faversham, Hertfordshlre, a son of the (Bible Christian) Rev. Thomas Piper, who arrived with his family from Exeter to South Australia aboard Collingrove in January 1870.[1] He was educated at South Australian public schools, then won an exhibition to study at Prince Alfred College. He was admitted to the bar at age 21, in July 1886.He became a partner in 1892 in the legal firm of Bakewell, Stow, and Piper, of which he later became head. Two of his sons, H. B. and F. E. Piper, were admitted as members of the firm. He was made a King's Counsel in 1911 on the silver jubilee of his career as a barrister. He was in partnership with some of South Australia's most prominent lawyers: Sir Josiah Symon, P. R. Stow and Leonard William Bakewell with whom he was associated as Symon, Bakewell, Stow and Piper. Symon dropped out; Bakewell retired In 1920, and around 1922 left to open a practice of his own. William K. Bakewell took over his father's share of the business, and Piper's sons H. B. and F. E. Piper, were brought into the firm as Piper, Bakewell, and Piper. On 16 June 1927, he succeeded Mr. Justice Poole on the Supreme Court bench.He served as president of the Law Society of South Australia for a total of five years, his second appointment being in the year before he died.
He died five months after an operation at Memorial Hospital. His remains were interred at the Mitcham Cemetery. His successor on the bench was Edward Erskine Cleland, K.C.
Arthur William Piper (5 July 1865 – 19 February 1936) married Edna Elizabeth Counter (– 24 June 1938) in 1889
They had a home at 91 Wattle street, Fullarton
R. W. Piper, 'Piper, Arthur William (1865–1936)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/piper-arthur-william-8507/text14051, published first in hardcopy 1988, accessed online 28 June 2018.