William Webb Follett Explained

Sir William Webb Follett
Honorific-Suffix:QC
Office:Attorney-General for England
Primeminister:Sir Robert Peel
Predecessor:Sir Frederick Pollock
Successor:Sir Frederic Thesiger
Term Start:15 April 1844
Term End:28 June 1845
Office1:Solicitor-General for England
Primeminister1:Sir Robert Peel
Predecessor1:Sir Thomas Wilde
Successor1:Sir Frederic Thesiger
Term Start1:1841
Term End1:1844
Term Start2:1834
Term End2:1835
Primeminister2:Sir Robert Peel
Predecessor2:Sir Robert Rolfe
Successor2:Sir Robert Rolfe
Office3:Member of Parliament
for Exeter
Term Start3:6 January 1835
Term End3:28 June 1845
Predecessor3:James Wentworth Buller
Edward Divett
Successor3:Sir John Duckworth, Bt
Edward Divett
Birth Date:1796 12, df=yes
Birth Place:Topsham, Devon
Death Place:Regent's Park, London
Party:Conservative
Alma Mater:Trinity College, Cambridge

Sir William Webb Follett, QC (2 December 179628 June 1845) was an English lawyer and politician who served as MP for Exeter (1835–1845). He served twice as Solicitor-General, in 1834-5 and 1841 and as Attorney-General in 1844. He was knighted in 1835. He was reputed to have been the "greatest advocate of the century".[1]

Early life

Follett was born 2 December 1796 at Topsham in Devon, the eldest surviving son of ten children. His father was Captain Benjamin Follett, late 13th Regiment of Infantry, who had retired from the army in 1790 and gone into business as a timber merchant,[2] and his mother was Ann Webb, daughter of John Webb, of Kinsale, Ireland.[3] His younger brother was Brent Spencer Follett (1810–1887) QC, MP and his sister Elizabeth married Richard Bright.[4] [5]

Follett attended Exeter grammar school[6] and was privately educated by Mr Hutchinson, the curate of Heavitree. In 1813, he matriculated at Trinity College, Cambridge, receiving a B.A. without honours in 1818 and an M.A. in 1830.

On 11 October 1830, Follett married Jane Mary Giffard, the eldest daughter of Sir Ambrose Hardinge Giffard (1771–1827) who was chief justice of British Ceylon. They had five sons and two daughters.

Career

He joined the Inner Temple in Michaelmas term 1814 and read in the chambers of Robert Bayly and Godfrey Sykes. He became a special pleader in 1821 and was called to the bar on 28 May 1824. He joined the western circuit in 1825, where his first notable case was Garnett v Ferrand.

In November 1828, he and Henry Brougham were briefed on the case of Rowe v Brenton and when Brougham became Lord Chancellor, he offered to make Follett a silk, but Follett declined. He had a large practice with the House of Lords and, when it was re-organised in 1833, the Privy Council of the United Kingdom.

In 1832, Follett ran to be a Member of Parliament for Exeter but was unsuccessful. Instead he served as recorder for Exeter from 1832 to 1834, when Sir Robert Peel formed his first administration. He became solicitor-general in November and thereafter was appointed a King's Counsel and received a knighthood.

On 6 January 1835, he was returned to parliament for Exeter with 1425 votes.[7] He resigned with the ministry in April 1835. In 1837 and 1841, Follett was re-elected to Parliament. On the return of Peel to power in 1841 Follett was again appointed Solicitor-General on 6 September, and on 15 April 1844 he succeeded Sir Frederick Pollock as Attorney-General.[8]

Follett never gave up his private practice. He was best known for defending James Brudenell, 7th Earl of Cardigan in 1841 after a duel with Captain Harvey Tuckett, and representing George Chapple Norton in an action against Lord Melbourne in 1836.[9] His speech in the latter case was parodied in the Pickwick Papers (1837).

Death and legacy

Follett was first ill in December 1835 and April 1836. He collapsed in February 1839 and could not return to work until later that year. He collapsed again in April 1844 and he was compelled to relinquish legal practice and to visit the south of Europe to recuperate. He returned to England in March 1845, but the tuberculosis, with which he had previously been diagnosed, reasserted itself and he died at Croker's house, 9 Cumberland Terrace, Regent's Park, London on 28 June 1845. He was buried in the Temple Church in London on 4 July.

A statue of Follett executed by William Behnes was erected by subscription and placed in the north transept[10] at Westminster Abbey. His marble bust by Edward Bowring Stephens exists in the Devon and Exeter Institution, Exeter.

Notes and References

  1. Per inscribed plaque on base of his bust in the Devon & Exeter Institution
  2. The Heraldic Register 1849-1850, with an annotated obituary, Bernard Burke, E. Churton, 1850, p. 73
  3. Ryall's Portraits of Conservative Statesmen, Henry Thomas Ryall, p. 1
  4. Follett, Sir William Webb (1796–1845), lawyer and politician. 2021-06-14. 2004. en. 10.1093/ref:odnb/9796. 978-0-19-861412-8.
  5. Book: Dod, Charles Roger Phipps . Charles Dod

    . Charles Dod . 2nd . The Parliamentarian Companion . 1852 . Whitaker and Co. . London . 178 .

  6. Book: Neale, Erskine. Stray leaves from a freemason's notebook, by a Suffolk rector. 1846. R. Spencer. en.
  7. Book: Besley, Henry. Besley's Exeter Directory, for 1835: With the List of Voters Polled at the Contest for the Representation of the City, in January, 1835. 1835. en.
  8. Book: Norton-Kyshe, James William. The Law and Privileges Relating to the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General of England: With a History from the Earliest Periods, and a Series of King's Attorneys and Attorneys and Solicitors-General from the Reign of Henry III. to the 60th of Queen Victoria. Stevens and Haynes. 1897. London. xiv. en. 741493559.
  9. Book: Norton. Caroline Sheridan. Letters of Caroline Norton to Lord Melbourne. Hoge. James O.. Olney. Clarke. Melbourne. William Lamb. The Ohio State University Press. 1974. 978-0-8142-0208-1. 69. 1811/24805. en.
  10. [Arthur Penrhyn Stanley|Stanley, A.P.]