Background
Scarlett was born in Jamaica, where his father, Robert Scarlett, had property.
Scarlett was born in Jamaica, where his father, Robert Scarlett, had property.
Having entered the Inner Temple he took the advice of Samuel Romilly, studied law on his own for a year, and then was taught by George Wood.
In the summer of 1785 he was sent to England to complete his education at Hawkshead Grammar School and afterwards at Trinity College, Cambridge, taking his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1789. He was called to the bar in 1791, and joined the northern circuit and the Lancashire sessions. Though Scarlett had no professional connections, he gradually obtained a large practice, ultimately confining himself to the Court of King"s Bench and the northern circuit.
He took silk in 1816, and from this time till the close of 1834 he was the most successful lawyer at the Barometer
He was particularly effective before a jury, and his income reached £18,500, a large sum for that period. He first entered parliament in 1819 as Whig member for Peterborough, representing that constituency with a short break (1822–1823) till 1830, when he was elected for the borough of Malton.
He became Attorney-General, and was knighted when Canning formed his ministry in 1827. And though he resigned when the Duke of Wellington came into power in 1828, he resumed office in 1829 and went out with the Duke in 1830.
His opposition to the Reform Bill caused him to leave the Whigs and join the Tories, and he was elected, first for Cockermouth in 1831 and then in 1832 for Norwich, for which he sat until the dissolution of parliament in 1835.
He was appointed Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer in 1834, and presided in that court for more than nine years. He was raised to the peerage as Baron Abinger, of Abinger in the County of Surrey and of the City of Norwich, in 1835, taking his title from the Surrey estate he had bought in 1813. The qualities which brought him success at the bar were not equalled on the bench.
He had a reputation for unfairness, and complaints were made about his domineering attitude towards juries.
While he was studying in England, he became the guardian of Edward Moulton, who later assumed his mother"s family name, and became the father of the poet Elizabeth Barrett, later Elizabeth Barrett Browining. In a note prefixed to the Collected Edition of his wife"s poems, Robert Browning tells us that "On the early death of his father, he (Edward Moulton) was brought from Jamaica to England when a very young child, as ward to the late Chief Baron Lord Abinger, then Mr.
Scarlett, whom he frequently accompanied in his post-chaise when on pursuit."
Sir William Anglin Scarlett, Lord Abinger"s younger brother, was chief justice of Jamaica. While attending the Norfolk circuit on 2 April, Lord Abinger was suddenly seized with apoplexy, and died in his lodgings at Bury.
A more distant relation was the painter John Scarlett Davis.
Fouldes v. Willoughby (1841).
6th United Kingdom Parliament. 7th United Kingdom Parliament. 8th United Kingdom Parliament.
9th United Kingdom Parliament.
11th United Kingdom Parliament.