Anthony Hammond (1758–1838) was an English barrister and legal writer, known as a legal reformer. His reform proposals for legal codification, influenced by Jeremy Bentham but also by Robert Malthus, went further than was acceptable at the time.[1]
In 1824 Hammond was examined by a select parliamentary committee appointed to consider the expediency of consolidating and amending the criminal law of England; and he submitted a draft measure for that purpose, which was printed by order of the House of Commons. It was later developed into a regular code, and formed the basis of Peel's Acts (the Larceny Laws Repeal and Consolidation, Criminal Procedure and Malicious Injuries to Property, and Remedies against the Hundred Consolidation Acts of 1827 (7 & 8 Geo 4 cc 27 - 31), according to Rigg.[2] Radzinowicz disputes this.[3] The code itself, with A Treatise on the Consolidation of the Criminal Law, was printed by order of Robert Peel, then Home Secretary, between 1825 and 1829, 8 vols, folio.[2]
Hammond was also consulted by the commissioners for the revision of the laws of the State of New York in 1825, to whom he communicated a pamphlet entitled Reflections on the Criminal Law. In 1828, Hammond was called to the bar. He died on 27 January 1838.[2]
Hamzo and Crimmins. "Hammond, Anthony (1758-1838)". Crimmins (ed). The Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Utilitarianism. 2013. Paperback. 2017. Page 138.
Venn and Venn (eds). "Hammond (formerly Ewbanke), Anthony". Volume 2: From 1752 to 1900. Part 3. Cambridge University Press. 1947. Reprinted 2011. Page 217.
Rouse Ball and Venn. "Hammond, Anthony". Admissions to Trinity College, Cambridge. Macmillan. 1911. Volume 3. Page 249.
Burke. "Anthony Hammond". A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland, for the Year 1853. Page 146.
Allibone. "Hammond, Anthony". A Critical Dictionary of English Literature. Childs & Peterson. Arch Street, Philadelphia. 1859. Volume 1. Page 779.
William Holdsworth. A History of English Law. First published 1952. Meuthen & Co. London. Volume 13. Page 286.
John V Orth. Combination and Conspiracy: A Legal History of Trade Unionism, 1721–1906. Clarendon Press. 1991. Page 75. Google Books
"Criminal Code" (1827) 1 The Jurist 1 (March 1827)
"Chronological Digest of English Cases" (1830) 2 United States Law Intelligencer and Review 105 (March 1830)
Report of the Commissioners appointed to revise the Statute Laws of this State. Albany. 1828. Page 6.
^Leon Radzinowicz. A History of English Criminal Law and its Administration from 1750. Volume 1 (The Movement for Reform). Stevens and Sons. 1948. Page 576.
^For a review of this book, see "Law" (1825) 2 The Monthly Critical Gazette 423 (No 11, 1 April 1825). For further commentary on this book, see Seaward, "The Treatise on Parliamentary Procedure" in Evans (ed). Essays on the History of Parliamentary Procedure. Hart Publishing. Oxford and Portland, Oregon. 2017. Page 113.