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in 1660 and its Chief
Justice in 1670, by which time he had already begun to suffer from the chronic ill-health which plagued his later years. His salary was fixed at £300 a year. He was a Bencher of the King's Inns and lived conveniently close to the Inns on present-day Church Street. He was one of
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and other illnesses, and rarely sat in Court. Ormonde's objections on the second point were fully justified, since Booth died in the early spring of 1681, after little more than a year in office. He was buried at
Salford. He left a large fortune and substantial estates in both England and Ireland.
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126:. That Booth's stepfather Thomas Case, though a staunch Presbyterian, has strongly supported the Restoration may also have been a recommendation. Booth was appointed a puisne justice of the
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regime (although he had made his peace with it himself), but he admired Booth's legal ability and believed (perhaps naively) that his wealth would preserve him from
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while on a trip to
England in 1668. He was passed over as Lord Chief Justice when the office fell vacant in 1673, on account of his strong Protestant sympathies.
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sympathies, despite the practice of that faith being (in theory) a bar to public office. Booth, who had been brought up by his
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212:, who died in 1660 giving birth to their only son Benjamin, who died in 1663. He remarried Susanna Oxenden, daughter of
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22:(1626–1681) was an English-born judge who had a highly successful career in Ireland, where he held the offices of
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42:: he was the eldest son of Robert Booth, a wealthy landowner, and Anne Mosley, daughter of Oswald Mosley of
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on ten hearths, making it one of the largest dwelling houses in the city. In 1664 he petitioned for a
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through the Inns garden: "that he might come a nearer way, privately into the house".
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schools. He regularly visited
England to consult with his medical advisers, and was
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or indifference". Ormonde also pointed out that Booth was almost incapacitated by
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stepfather, who closely supervised his education, had a reputation as an extreme
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he had the good fortune to attract the notice of Steele's successor, Sir
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Sir Henry
Oxenden, father of Sir Robert Booth's second wife Susannah
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118:, was normally hostile to anyone who had been associated with the
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Booth married firstly Mary Potts, daughter of
Spencer Potts of
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appointed him Lord Chief
Justice, despite objections from
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are related to but not direct descendants of the judge.
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in 1650; he became an ancient of Gray's Inn in 1662.
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He is first heard of in
Ireland in the entourage of
151:became vacant. This occurred at the height of the
183:, who thought that Booth was far too inclined to
28:Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench in Ireland
251:, on present-day Church Street, adjacent to the
62:. Booth himself, though he was a member of the
340:. Vol. 5. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
232:, and was the mother of the celebrated actor
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549:People educated at Manchester Grammar School
78:, where he matriculated in 1644. He entered
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220:and his second wife Elizabeth Meredith of
564:Chief justices of the Irish Common Pleas
403:"King's Inns and the Kingdom of Ireland"
554:Members of the Privy Council of Ireland
473:Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas
356:, John Murray, London 1926 Vol. I p.349
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24:Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas
534:Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
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147:In 1679 the Chief Justiceship of the
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331:"Booth, Robert (1626-1681)"
275:St. Patrick's College, Drumcondra
177:James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde
337:Dictionary of National Biography
354:The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921
247:His principal residence was at
149:Court of King's Bench (Ireland)
131:the original Governors of the
128:Court of Common Pleas (Ireland)
559:Lords chief justice of Ireland
214:Sir Henry Oxenden, 1st Baronet
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501:Lord Chief Justice of Ireland
76:St. John's College, Cambridge
70:leanings. He was educated at
58:preacher and Parliamentarian
466:Sir Edward Smith (or Smythe)
371:A Cambridge Alumni Database
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367:"Booth, Robert (BT644R)"
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114:. Eustace, a staunch
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143:Lord Chief Justice
16:English-born judge
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216:of Deane in
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449:Kenny p.141
253:King's Inns
222:Leeds Abbey
153:Popish Plot
120:Cromwellian
108:Restoration
104:King's Inns
60:Thomas Case
523:Categories
494:John Povey
477:1670–1679
392:Ball p.271
383:Ball p.349
300:References
257:hearth tax
185:Puritanism
173:Charles II
165:Protestant
124:corruption
80:Gray's Inn
48:Manchester
34:Early life
286:Lissadell
273:, is now
267:Belvidere
249:Oxmantown
206:Chalgrave
137:knighted
116:Royalist
161:Puritan
44:Ancoats
40:Salford
179:, the
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