Henry de Waal
Sir Constant Hendrik de Waal, KCB, QC, known as Sir Henry de Waal, was a British-Dutch lawyer and parliamentary draftsman.Biography
Early life and education
De Waal was born in 1931 to Hendrik de Waal and Elizabeth, née von Ephrussi; his cousins included Victor de Waal, dean of Canterbury, and Hugo de Waal, bishop suffragan of Thetford and principal of Ridley Hall, Cambridge. He attended Tonbridge School between 1944 and 1948, and then Pembroke College, Cambridge, graduating with a BA in law in 1951, and then a postgraduate LLB the following year. A Dutch citizen, he was naturalised as a British subject in January 1953, and called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn later in the year; he was a Cassel Scholar at the Inn.Career
De Waal was a fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge, between 1958 and 1960, when he joined the Office of the Parliamentary Counsel. Aside from two years with the Law Commission, he remained at the OPC until 1991, serving as a parliamentary counsel from 1971, before being promoted to Second Parliamentary Counsel in 1981 and First Parliamentary Counsel in 1987. He left that office in 1991, and became counsel to the Law Commission. He retired in 1996, by which time he had been appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath and a bencher of Lincoln's Inn, a Queen's Counsel, and an honorary fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge.Death
De Waal died on 1 October 2016, leaving behind a widow and two children.