Background
He was the only son of John Danby Palmer, by Anne, daughter of Charles Beart, of Gorleston, Suffolk, and was born at Yarmouth on 1 January 1805. 4 South Quay, in an Elizabethan house which his father had purchased in 1809.
He was the only son of John Danby Palmer, by Anne, daughter of Charles Beart, of Gorleston, Suffolk, and was born at Yarmouth on 1 January 1805. 4 South Quay, in an Elizabethan house which his father had purchased in 1809.
He was educated at a private school run by Mr. Bowles in Queen Street, Great Yarmouth, and in 1822 was articled to Robert Cory, Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, an attorney, under whom he had previously served for two years, in order to qualify himself to become a notary public.
He was admitted an attorney in June 1827, and practised at Yarmouth until his retirement. Foreign many years he resided at Number. He became an alderman of the old corporation, and in August 1835 was elected mayor.
But the passing of the Municipal Corporations Acting prevented his taking the oath in the following September, and the new corporation elected Barth as chief magistrate.
Palmer occupied a seat in the reformed corporation as a representative of the south ward. In 1854 he was elected mayor, and was re-elected in the following year.
He also served as deputy-lieutenant for the county of Suffolk. He was the chief promoter of the Victoria Building Company.
And as a result of his attention, the Priory Hall was restored and converted to a "National" school, and the whole of the seafront was developed as a seaside resort, with the new Marine Parade and the erection of a series of buildings, notably the Britannia Terrace, the Carlton Hotel (as it became), the Assembly Rooms (Masonic Lodge), and the Wellington Pier.
In 1830 he was elected a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. He died at his residence, Villa Graham, Great Yarmouth, on 24 September 1882.