Richard Pepper Arden, 1st Baron Alvanley explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Lord Alvanley
Office1:Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas
Term Start1:23 May 1801
Term End1:19 March 1804
Monarch1:George III
Predecessor1:The Lord Eldon
Successor1:Sir James Mansfield
Office2:Master of the Rolls
Term Start2:1788
Term End2:1801
Monarch2:George III
Predecessor2:Sir Lloyd Kenyon
Successor2:Sir William Grant
Office3:Attorney General
Term Start3:1784
Term End3:1788
Monarch3:George III
Primeminister3:William Pitt the Younger
Predecessor3:Lloyd Kenyon
Successor3:Sir Archibald Macdonald
Birth Date:20 June 1744
Birth Place:Bredbury, England
Nationality:British
Alma Mater:Trinity College, Cambridge

Richard Pepper Arden, 1st Baron Alvanley (20 May 1744 – 19 March 1804) was a British barrister and Whig politician, who served as the Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas. He was a Member of Parliament from 1783 to 1801.

Biography

He was born on 20 May 1744 in Bredbury, the son of John Arden (1709–1787),[1] and Mary Pepper, and baptised on 20 June 1744 in Stockport. Educated at The Manchester Grammar School, he matriculated at Trinity College, Cambridge in November 1761[2] and received his BA in 1766. Arden was admitted to the Middle Temple in 1769, and received his MA from Trinity the same year, being made a Fellow of the college shortly after.

He took chambers in Lincoln's Inn and became a close friend of William Pitt, with whom he would maintain a political alliance throughout his career. In 1776 he was made judge on the South Wales circuit. Invested as a King's Counsel in 1780, he was Solicitor General during the ministry of Shelburne, and again for a year under Pitt the Younger. At this time he entered the House of Commons as the Whig MP for Newtown, representing the seat from 1783 to 1784. In 1784 he became MP for Aldborough, and was appointed Attorney General and Chief Justice of Chester, posts he would hold until 1788.

On 4 June 1788, he was again advanced to become Master of the Rolls, and was knighted on 18 June 1788. He was also appointed to the Privy Council that year. In 1790, he left Aldborough to become MP for Hastings until 1794, and then for Bath until 1801.

In May 1801, he was appointed Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, and on 22 May 1801, was created Baron Alvanley, of Alvanley, in the County of Chester. Alvanley died on 19 March 1804 and was buried a week later in Rolls Chapel, London. His will was probated in April 1804.

Quoting from Cokayne, The Complete Peerage: "He was not a man of great oratorical powers, but possessed the qualities of intelligence, readiness and wit... It would be vain to claim any great distinction for Lord Alvanley. He was a learned lawyer and a successful politician... the few productions that remain from his pen evince refinement, taste and facility of expression."

Family

On 9 September 1784, Arden married Anne Dorothea Wilbraham-Bootle (1757-1825), daughter of Richard Wilbraham-Bootle and Mary Bootle.[3] Their children were:

Escutcheon:Gules three cross-crosslets fitchée Or on a chief of the second a crescent of the first.
Crest:Out of a ducal coronet Or five ostrich feathers Argent charged with a crescent Gules.
Supporters:Two talbots the dexter Argent collared Gules thereon three arrows of the first the sinister Sable thereon three arrows Gules.
Motto:Patientiâ Vinces [6]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Ricard Parkinson,The Private Journal and Literary Remains of John Byrom, Vol II Part II, Chetham Society, Printed for the Chetham society, 1857. p. 642
  2. Arden's DNB entry has him at Manchester Grammar from 1752 to 1763, and entering Trinity College in October 1763. However, these dates do not agree with Venn's Alumni Cantabrigienses or with ODNB.
  3. Edmund Lodge, The Peerage of the British Empire as at Present Existing (Saunders and Otley, 1833), 17.
  4. A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage, 22nd edition, Sir Bernard Burke, Harrison & Sons, 1860, p. 1117.
  5. The History and Antiquities of the Parish of Darlington, W. H. D. Longstaffe, J. Henry Parker (London), 1854, p. 389.
  6. Book: Burke's Peerage . 1850.