William Hughes (writer) explained

William Hughes (2 March 1803  - 20 August 1861), was a British writer on law and angling in the 19th century.

Biography

Hughes, born in Maker Vicarage, Cornwall, was the fourth son of Sir Robert Hughes, third baronet, by his second wife, Bethia, daughter of Thomas Hiscutt, and was a nephew of Admiral Sir Richard Hughes. His father, who matriculated from Trinity College, Oxford, on 30 March 1757, aged 17, was a demy of Magdalen College 1758–67, B.A. 1761, M.A. 1763, rector of Frimley St Mary and Weston, Suffolk, from 1769 until his death, and was buried on 4 June 1814.[1]

William was admitted to the bar at Gray's Inn on 11 June 1833, and practised as a conveyancer on the Western Circuit, where he was also auditor of the poor-law union district of Cornwall and Devonshire. He died at Millbay Grove, Plymouth.[1]

Works

Hughes's chief writings were:[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Boase . G. C.. George Clement Boase. Hughes, William (1803–1861), writer on law and angling . Dictionary of National Biography Vol. XXIIX . Smith, Elder & Co. . 1891 . 2007-12-28.