The General Biographical Dictionary, Vol. 30: Containing an Historical and Critical Account of the Lives and Writings of the Most Eminent Persons in Every Nation; Particularly the British and Irish (Classic Reprint)

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Excerpt from The General Biographical Dictionary, Vol. 30: Containing an Historical and Critical Account of the Lives and Writings of the Most Eminent Persons in Every Nation; Particularly the British and Irish

Mr. Alderman White of Oxford, by whom he had two sons, Henry, so baptised after his godfather lord Bolingbroke, who died In infancy, and Joseph, who became in 1734 fel low of New college Oxford, and in 1751 was presented by George Pitt, esq. Afterwards lord Rivers, to the living of Stratfield, near Hertford Bridge, Hampshire. He died In 1769.

Treby (george), a learned judge, was born, as Wood thinks, at or near Plympton in Devonshire in 1644, and was admitted a commoner of Exeter college, Oxford, in 1660. After studying some time here, he left college without taking a degree, as, we have repeatedly had occasion to observe, was usual with young gentlemen intended for the law; and went to the Inner Temple. After being admitted to the bar, he had much practice, and was accounted a good common lawyer. In 1678 and 1679, he sat in par liament as representative for Plympton, and in the last mentioned year was appointed chairman of the committee of secrecy for the investigation of the popish plot, and was in 1680 one of the managers in the impeachment of lord Stafford. In December of the same year, when sir George Jefi'ries was dismissed from the recordership of London, Mr. Treby was elected in his room, and in January 1681 the king conferred on him the honour of knighthood but when the qua warranto issued, and the city charter, for which he pleaded along with Pollexfen, was withheld, he was de prived of the recordership in Oct. 1685. On the revolu tion, king William restored him to this office, and he had the honour of addressing his majesty, in the absence of the lord mayor, sir John Chapman, who was confined by sick nests. His very able speech on this occasion was published in the Fourth collection of papers relating to the present juncture of affairs In England, 1688, 4to, and In Bohun' s History of the Desertion, 1689, 4to In March 1688 he was made solicitor-general, aiid the following year attorney general. In April 1692 he was called to the rank of serjeant, and In May following was promoted to be chief justice of the Common Pleas, on which he resigned the oflice of recorder. This learned and upright lawyer died in 'march 1701-2, aged fifty-six. His son and grandson, of the' same names, represented Plympton and Dartmouth.

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