William Bodkin (judge)


Sir William Henry Bodkin was a British barrister and Conservative Party politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1841 to 1847, before becoming a judge.

Early life

Bodkin was the son of Peter Bodkin from Galway and his wife Sarah. His father's family had long connections with County Galway.
He was educated at the Islington Academy and called to the bar in 1826 at Gray's Inn.

Career

Bodkin initially practised on the Home Circuit, taking mostly criminal cases at the Middlesex, Westminster and Kent Sessions, and in the Central Criminal Court in the Old Bailey. was appointed as a recorder of Dover in 1834.
He was elected at the 1841 general election as a Member of Parliament for the borough of Rochester in Kent, winning the seat by a margin of only two votes over the Liberal Party candidate Viscount Melgund. Bodkin was defeated at the 1847 general election as a result of his support for the free trade measures introduced by Sir Robert Peel. He did not stand at the 1852 general election, but unsuccessfully contested the borough at a by-election in February 1856.
He was knighted in 1867. He later became a Justice of the Peace in Middlesex, and a Deputy Lieutenant of Middlesex, and judge of the Court of Sessions in Middlesex.
He was an active member of the Society of Arts, becoming its vice-president. He wrote several pamphlets on the English Poor Laws.
Bodkin died aged 82 on 26 March 1874, after a long and painful illness. He was buried in the family grave at Highgate Cemetery

Personal life

Bodkin lived at West Hill in Highgate, North London.
He married twice, first in 1812 to Sara Sophia Poland, who died in 1848, and then in 1865 to Sarah Constance Miles, the daughter of Joseph Johnson Miles, a J.P from Highgate. He had one son and one daughter. His son, William Henry Bodkin, succeeded him in several of his judging roles, and was the father of Sir Archibald Bodkin.
He is buried with his first wife.