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In its obituary notice of the late Lord Justice Mathew, the London Daily Telegraph says: 'The debt of English law to Irishmen during the last half-century is far greater than might have been expected from the size of Ireland's population, or the English estimate of Irish character. No greater Chancellor has ever sat on-- the Woolsack than Cairns, to whom must be added Keating, Willes, Martin, Shee, Lord Russell of Killoween, Lord Macnaugliten, and the former Master of the Rolls, Lord Collins. Sir -James Mathew was thoroughly Irish, though he was -actually born at Bordeaux:, and both Lord Halsbury and, the late Lord Bowon may be reckoned, at least in part, as Irishmen.'

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT19090415.2.13

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXVII, Issue 15, 15 April 1909, Page 570

Word Count
113

Untitled New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXVII, Issue 15, 15 April 1909, Page 570

Untitled New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXVII, Issue 15, 15 April 1909, Page 570

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