He was the second of three sons of Cape solicitor Jacobus Christoffel Wessels, Esq. (Joostenberg, Stellenbosch, 26 September 1814 - Green Point, Cape Town, 22 October 1889) and Anna Marthina Neethling (Cape Town, 30 October 1822 - Green Point, Capetown, 28 April 1897)[4][5] and attended the South African College.[4] After matriculating he attended the University of Cape Town and obtained a BA Honours in 1882.[4] With a scholarship to read law, he attended Downing College, Cambridge and graduated in 1885 with a Law Tripos.[4] He won a scholarship in international and constitutional law at the Middle Temple and took the Bar in 1886.[4]
Career
He returned to South Africa and joined the Bar in the Cape Colony and the Transvaal Bar in 1887.[4] He made his name as the lawyer for the Witwatersrand gold mine owners challenge of the patents for John Stewart MacArthur's MacArthur-Forrest cyanidation process.[4] He won the case in 1896, with the patents declared invalid.[4]
Wessels married twice. Helen Duff in 1891 and after she died in 1925, married her sister Agnes in 1928.[4]
Family
Wessels' family had a farm in Green Point today known as Braemar Estate, and erected a burial vault on the farm known as the Woutersen Wessels Vault dating back to the 19th century. Wessels' brother, Adv. M L Wessels, and other family members are memorialised in the vault, which is today a protected heritage site.[7][8]
References
^South Africa, Dutch Reformed Church Registers, 1660-1970
^England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858–1995
^Zimmermann, Reinhard; Visser, Daniel (1996). Southern Cross: Civil Law and Common Law in South Africa. Cape Town: Juta. pp. 123–124.
^ abcdefghijklmnop"Sir J. W. Wessels". The Times (London). No. 47474. 8 September 1936. p. 17 – via Gale.