Sir Samuel Brownlow Gray CMG (27 April 1823[1] – 20 January 1910[2]) was a barrister in Bermuda.
Life
Gray was born in St. George's, Bermuda, the son of Benjamin Charles Thomas Gray and Elizabeth Brownlow of Bermuda.[1] He was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn in 1847. He was Inspector of schools in Bermuda from 1848, and was in May 1861 appointed Attorney-General of Bermuda.[3]
In May 1900, he was appointed Chief Justice of Bermuda,[4] and he served as President of the Legislative Council. He stepped down from both positions in 1905.
Honours
He was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) in January 1888,[5] and knighted in the King's Birthday Honours November 1901.[6]
Personal life and death
A keen tennis player, he helped introduce the game to Bermuda.[7]
Gray married, in 1851, Eliza Anne Trimingham, daughter of Hon. James H. Trimingham. They had two sons and three daughters (one died young). The eldest son, Sir Reginald Gray (1851-1935), was also a barrister and a politician in Bermuda. Elder daughter, Bessie Eliza Brownlow Gray (1854-1925), was an accomplished watercolourist and poet.[8]
Sir Samuel died in Hamilton, Bermuda on 20 January 1910.
References