William Dunkin | |
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Born | 1807 |
Nationality | Irish |
Occupations |
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Sir William Dunkin (died 1807) [1] was an Irish barrister and judge in Bengal.
Dunkin was admitted to the Middle Temple in 1753, as the eldest son of John Dunkin of Bushfoot, County Antrim; [2] Later he was described as from Clogher, County Antrim. [3] He was High Sheriff of Antrim in 1777. [4] Although he had inherited an estate, he encumbered it with debt, and went to Calcutta to practise as a barrister. [5]
In October 1781 Dunkin was mentioned as on the way to India in a letter from Edmund Burke to Lord George Macartney, two of his friends. [6] There he was a friend of William Hickey. [7] He lived a bachelor life, sharing accommodation with Stephen Cassan, another Irish barrister. [5] In 1788 he set off to go to England in search of a judicial appointment in Calcutta, [8] [9] sailing to Europe in December on the Phoenix under Captain Gray. [10]
Dunkin returned to Bengal on the Phoenix in August 1791; [11] he had been appointed a member of the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William. [12] [13] being knighted in March of that year. [14] The appointment was later attributed to the influence of Henry Dundas. [15] Dunkin had in fact obtained a reluctant support for it from Lord Thurlow. His senior colleague on the court, Robert Chambers, did not welcome it, regarding Dunkin as suspect; [7] further Dunkin and Hickey were allies in opposition to Chambers. [16] Hickey's accounts of Chambers in his memoirs, in relation to Dunkin on the court, have been called partisan and misleading, in particular in relation to a bazaar case where John Hyde was brought from his sickbed in 1796 as a supporting vote by Chambers against Dunkin. [17]
Dunkin resigned from the post in 1797, being replaced by John Royds. [18] [19] He had a house in Portman Square, London, [20] where Thomas Reynolds knew him as one of a set of wealthy returnees from India; [21] and died at The Polygon, Southampton in 1807. [1]
When Sir William Jones died in 1794, Dunkin wrote a Latin epitaph, used on his tomb in Calcutta. [22] [23] [24] An English paraphrase was later made by Eyles Irwin. [25]
Dunkin married Elizabeth or Eliza Blacker (1739–1822), daughter of William Blacker (1709–1783), in 1764. [26] [27] [28] Their eldest daughter Letitia married Sir Francis Workman Macnaghten, having a family of 16 children, among them William Hay Macnaghten. [29] [30] When Dunkin clashed with William Burroughs, attorney-general in Bengal from 1792, Francis Macnaghten tried to challenge Burroughs to a duel, and then to have him disbarred. [31] Through the marriage, the Macnaghtens acquired the Dunkin family house at Bushmills. [32]
Of Dunkin's other children, his daughter Jane married Richard William Wake, son of Sir William Wake, 8th Baronet, [33] and his daughter Rachel married John Bladen Taylor, the Member of Parliament for Hythe, as her second husband, the first being George Elliott of Bengal. [34] [35] The youngest daughter, Matilda, married Valentine Conolly, son of William Conolly. [36] [37]
Hickey mentions two sons. One, Edward, came to Bengal with his father in 1791, in his late teens but suffered from fits. [11] According to Hickey, he returned to Europe and died young. [38] He also makes Captain John Dunkin (John Henry Dunkin) of the 8th Light Dragoons a brother of Letitia. [39]