The Bench And Bar of Georgia During the Eighteenth Century
The book The Bench And Bar of Georgia During the Eighteenth Century was written by author Lamar, Joseph Rucker, 1857-1916 Here you can read free online of The Bench And Bar of Georgia During the Eighteenth Century book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is The Bench And Bar of Georgia During the Eighteenth Century a good or bad book?
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II, Chap. 23) to admit attorneys who had read 5 years. Barristers, however, were called to the Bar by the Inns of Court much as the graduates of the University Law School without examination in court. Three of the four Colonial Governors attended these institutions. William Stephens was a student of the Middle Temple and had occasion to use his legal training when he was made President of the Col- ony and presided in land cases and on appeals from the Town Court of Savannah. Governor Ellis read... at Temple Court, and Sir James Wright, a son of the Chief Justice of South Carolina, had also read at one of the Inns of Court. Both, therefore, had a training which was valuable when they sat in the Court of Chancery or presided on appeals from the General Court. Besides these three Governors of Georgia and Clinton, who had read at Gray's Inn, there were also, no doubt, a number of lawyers in the Colony who had been students at these seats of legal learning. William Simpson was a student (1777) at the Middle Temple, and James Robertson, Attorney General under the British in 1778, was a student of the Inner Temple.
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