Robert Thorpe | |
---|---|
Chief Justice of Sierra Leone | |
In office 1808–1815 | |
Succeeded by | Dr. Robert Hogan |
Member of the Upper Canada Legislative Assembly | |
In office 1806–1807 | |
Preceded by | William Weekes |
Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island | |
In office 1801–1804 | |
Preceded by | Peter Stewart |
Succeeded by | Caesar Colclough |
Robert Thorpe (1773 – May 11,1836) was a judge and political figure in Upper Canada and was later chief justice of Sierra Leone.
Thorpe was born in Dublin,Ireland in 1773. [1] He was the second son of Robert T. Thorpe and Bonna Debrisay. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1788 and a degree in law in 1789 from Trinity College Dublin. He was admitted to the bar in 1790. At some point before 1815 he was given a Legum Doctor. [2]
In 1801,he was appointed as Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island,arriving in the colony in November 1802. [3] He encouraged the attorney general Peter Magowan to prosecute minor crimes that were annoying to the population. [2] Since he was not paid on time,he sailed to England in 1804 with a plan to unite Prince Edward Island,Cape Breton and Newfoundland. He was captured by a French privateer and taken to Spain. [2] Thorpe later escaped and was appointed a puisne judge of the Court of King's Bench in Upper Canada on 5 July 1805. [4] In 1806 William Weekes was killed in a duel and Thorpe was elected as his replacement to the 4th Parliament of Upper Canada. He advocated that the executive council should be responsible to the elected representatives. [1] He advocated for ideas that would be later called responsible government and home rule. Lieutenant Governor Francis Gore suspended Thorpe from the legislature in July 1807 for advocating against the powers of the Lieutenant Governor. [2] He left Upper Canada in 1807 when he believed he would be removed from his role as a judge due to his reform ideas. [1]
In 1808,Thorpe was appointed the first chief justice in Sierra Leone (chief justice and judge of the Vice-Admiralty Court). [5] He arrived in Sierra Leone in 1811. [2] He presided over the cases of Samuel Samo (7-10 April 1812),Joseph Peters (11 June 1812) and William Tufft (12 June 1812). [6] [7] Thorpe left Sierra Leone in 1813 after he was given a health leave by the governor of Sierra Leone. [8] He was ordered to pay £630 for a surrogate who presided as a judge for him. In 1815 Thorpe brought charges against Charles William Maxwell and supposedly tried to blackmail the colonial secretary Lord Bathurst. Thorpe was dismissed from his judgeship for not bringing the charges to Bathurst sooner. [2]
Thorpe was married and had seven children. [2]
In 1815 he published A Letter to William Wilberforce,Esq. M. P.,Vice-President of the African Institution which was critical of the Sierra Leone Company and the African Institution which succeeded it.
He died in London on May 11,1836. [2]
William Wilberforce was a British politician,philanthropist and a leader of the movement to abolish the slave trade. A native of Kingston upon Hull,Yorkshire,he began his political career in 1780,and became an independent Member of Parliament (MP) for Yorkshire (1784–1812). In 1785,he underwent a conversion experience and became an evangelical Christian,which resulted in major changes to his lifestyle and a lifelong concern for reform.
James Stephen was the principal English lawyer associated with the movement for the abolition of slavery. Stephen was born in Poole,Dorset;the family home later being removed to Stoke Newington. He married twice and was the father of Sir James Stephen,grandfather of Sir James Fitzjames Stephen and Sir Leslie Stephen,and great-grandfather of Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell.
Brigadier-General Sir John Johnson,2nd Baronet was an American-born military officer,magistrate,landowner in the British Indian Department who fought as a Loyalist during the American Revolutionary War. He was the son of Sir William Johnson,1st Baronet,who was the first British Superintendent of Indian Affairs. He inherited his father's baronetcy and estate in 1774.
Michael Linning Melville was a Scots Barrister,Judge and Lieutenant Governor of Sierra Leone. He was commissioned by King William IV of the United Kingdom to suppress the slave trade by force off the West Coast of Africa.
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The Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade,also known as the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade,and sometimes referred to as the Abolition Society or Anti-Slavery Society, was a British abolitionist group formed on 22 May 1787. The objective of abolishing the slave trade was achieved in 1807. The abolition of slavery in all British colonies followed in 1833.
Thomas Perronet Thompson was a British Parliamentarian,a governor of Sierra Leone and a radical reformer. He became prominent in 1830s and 1840s as a leading activist in the Anti-Corn Law League. He specialized in the grass-roots mobilisation of opinion through pamphlets,newspaper articles,correspondence,speeches,and endless local planning meetings.
Thomas Peters,born Thomas Potters,was a veteran of the Black Pioneers,fighting for the British in the American Revolutionary War. A Black Loyalist,he was resettled in Nova Scotia,where he became a politician and one of the "Founding Fathers" of the nation of Sierra Leone in West Africa. Peters was among a group of influential Black Canadians who pressed the Crown to fulfill its commitment for land grants in Nova Scotia. Later they recruited African-American settlers in Nova Scotia for the colonisation of Sierra Leone in the late eighteenth century.
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