British politician and judge
John Lort-Williams, from a 1908 campaign poster
Sir John Rolleston Lort-Williams [ 1] (14 September 1881 – 9 June 1966) was a Judge and MP for Rotherhithe between the general elections of 1918 and 1923 .[ 2] [ 3]
Lort-Williams was born in Walsall , the only son of Charles William Williams, a local solicitor.[ 4] He was educated at Merchant Taylors School and the University of London . In 1902 he adopted the surname Lort-Williams .[ 5] Two years later he was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn . He stood for election for the Conservative Party at the Pembrokeshire during the 1906 United Kingdom general election and the 1908 Pembrokeshire by-election , but was unsuccessful in both attempts, first to John Wynford Philipps and then to Walter Roch .[ 6]
From 1907 to 1910 he represented Tower Hamlets, Limehouse on the London County Council as a Municipal Reform Party councillor.[ 7] [ 8] In 1918 he was elected to parliament at Rotherhithe.
After not being reelected in 1923, Lort-Williams resumed his legal career and became Recorder of Walsall in 1924.[ 2] In 1927 he was appointed as a Puisne Judge of the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta , in succession to William Ewart Greaves .[ 2] [ 4] In 1936, while being Judge of the High Court of Judicature at Fort William in Bengal , Lort-Williams was styled as Knight Bachelor .[ 1] He held the post until his retirement in 1941.
He died at his Worcestershire home in 1966, aged 84.
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