Sir William Gerard (1518–1581) was an Elizabethan statesman, who had a distinguished record of government service in England, Wales and most notably in Ireland. He sat in the House of Commons for Chester for many years, and was Vice-President of the Council of Wales and the Marches.
He was Lord Chancellor of Ireland for five years. Historians have praised his energetic efforts to reform the Irish legal system, although they differ as to his effectiveness in this task. Despite the fact that he was not a clergyman, he was appointed Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin in 1573, although he admitted to having an "uneasy conscience" about his fitness for any clerical position.His name has also been spelt as William Gerrard.
William entered Gray's Inn in 1543, was called to the Bar in 1546, and became an Ancient of Gray's Inn (this title was normally awarded to those barristers who had practised in the Inn for ten years) in 1552. Elrington Ball argues that his legal qualifications were insufficient for the office of Lord Chancellor of Ireland, The Judges in Ireland 1221–1921 but in fact, William had acquired considerable legal experience. He was made Attorney General for Wales in 1554, Recorder of Chester in 1556, a justice in Wales in 1559 and vice-justice of Chester in 1561.
Gerard became a member of the Council of Wales and the Marches in 1560, and Vice-President of the Council in 1562. He gained the reputation of being an energetic and efficient administrator, and an enthusiastic reformer, and it was for that reason that the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Sir Henry Sidney, asked for him to be appointed Lord Chancellor of Ireland in 1576. The office had been vacant for three years, and Sidney wanted a zealous Chancellor to assist him in his ambitious reform program. He had worked with Gerard during his time in Wales, and had the highest opinion of his abilities.Crawford, Jon G. A Star Chamber Court in Ireland-the Court of Castle Chamber 1571–1641 Four Courts Press Dublin 2006. For some years a warm friendship existed between the two men: the unusual first name, Sidney, which Gerard gave to one of his daughters (who later became Lady Wynn) may have been a tribute to their friendship.Thomas, D.L. "John Wynn" Dictionary of National Biography 1885-1900 Vol. 63 p.257
He argued for the need to introduce large numbers of English settlers to Ireland (in Ball's opinion, this is an example of Gerard's habit of constantly interfering in matters which were none of his business). He wrote vividly of the wretched and starving condition of the native Irish; some parts of the country were almost depopulated. The country was much afflicted by thieves, all of whom should be hanged: "English justice must be the executioner". He had a low opinion of his Irish civil servants, finding "not one good man among the whole crew". By March 1577 he was insisting that he must have English lawyers to assist him, or else, he claimed, the job would be the death of him.
Crawford, the author of A Star Chamber Court in Ireland, argues that Gerard as Lord Chancellor had a twofold aim: to re-establish the authority of the courts of common law throughout Ireland, and to supplement their authority by using the powers vested in his own office to turn the Court of Castle Chamber, the Irish equivalent of Star Chamber, which had been established in 1571, into an effective executive body for maintenance of public order. In the second aim at least he had considerable success in the early years, when Castle Chamber heard a large number of cases dealing with riot, affray and other offences against public order. Gerard has been praised for the meticulous care he took in investigating cases before the Court and his willingness to bring them to resolution.
So heavy indeed was the volume of public order cases in Castle Chamber that in 1579 he apologized to Lord Burghley for being unable to hear a private case in which Burghley had an interest. One notable private case was brought against the 8th Baron Howth on a charge of cruelty to his wife and daughter Jane. Castle Chamber accepted the evidence that he had beaten his wife so severely that she was in fear of her life, while Jane had died soon after a similar beating, and probably as a direct result of it. Given Howth's social standing, the penalties were severe enough: he was briefly imprisoned, subjected to heavy fines and ordered to pay alimony to his wife, who was allowed to live apart from him and was given custody of their children.Crawford, A Star Chamber Court in Ireland
Gerard studied the history of English rule in Ireland, and the reasons for the Crown's failure to establish its authority over the whole island, in-depth.Otway-Ruthven, A.J. A History of Medieval Ireland Barnes and Noble reissue New York 1993 p.277 He concluded that the turning point was 1350, after which English authority in Ireland began inexorably to shrink. Otway-Ruthven p.277
Gerard travelled to London to urge a policy of moderation and to plead for the release of the three imprisoned lawyers, and apparently outlined his own alternative to the levying of cess, while being careful to defend Sidney's policy in general. The Queen, having initially supported Sidney, was persuaded by Gerard's arguments that the cess was a mistaken policy and rebuked Sidney for trying to introduce it. The Lord Deputy now quarrelled violently with Gerard, whose advice he had until then greatly relied on, and whom he had called "my counsellor". Sidney was recalled in 1578.Richard Bagwell. Ireland Under the Tudors, Vol. II pp. 328-29, Longmans Green London.
By 1580 it was clear that he could not live long, and the Queen gave him permission to retire to Chester. He had planned to visit London in March of that year, but found himself "lame beyond hope of recovery". He wrote a loyal letter to Elizabeth I, saying that he hoped to see her one more time even if he had to crawl all the way to London, but by then he was too ill to leave Chester, where he died in early May 1581.Ball, Judges in Ireland He was buried in St. Oswald's Church, Chester, then situated within Chester Cathedral,J S Barrow, J D Herson, A H Lawes, P J Riden and M V J Seaborne, 'Churches and religious bodies: Medieval parish churches', in A History of the County of Chester: Volume 5 Part 2, the City of Chester: Culture, Buildings, Institutions, ed. A T Thacker and C P Lewis (London, 2005), pp. 133-156[1]"buried in Chester Cathedral", per Fuidge, N. M. (1981). "Gerard, William I (d.1581), of Chester Ireland.". In Hasler, P.W. (ed.). The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558–1603. Boydell and Brewer[2] where survives his mural monument. Much of his will is devoted to a description of his financial troubles and the difficulties he experienced in providing for his family.
Ball also suggests he was not free from corruption, although there seems to be little evidence of this: the reference in his will to his "wicked life" may simply be a conventional reference to his Puritan belief in human wickedness generally. Judges in Ireland.
O'Flanagan, on the other hand, in his rather brief study of Gerard describes him as an energetic and conscientious Lord Chancellor who probably damaged his health by overwork.O'Flanagan J. Roderick The Lives of the Lord Chancellors of Ireland 2 Volumes London 1870 Crawford goes further in praising Gerard as an outstanding Chancellor. He calls him an energetic and capable reformer who in his early years in Ireland did much to re-establish the authority of the courts and, as the case of Lord Howth shows, was willing to administer impartial justice even against members of the nobility.
The cess controversy
Last years and death
Family
Reputation
Notes
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