Richard Bullock Andrews, commonly referred to as "Mr. Justice Andrews", was an Australian politician and judge.
Background
Richard Bullock Andrews was born in Epping, Essex, England the eldest child of Richard Bullock Andrews, an attorney, and his wife Emma Annual From December 1839 Bullock worked in his father"s solicitors business. On 15 August 1846 he married Elizabeth Holtaway (29 August 1818 – 15 February 1906), daughter of a solicitor.
Career
Andrews emigrated to South Australia, arriving there 14 December 1852 aboard the steamship Sydney. In 1853 he was appointed a notary public, on 3 May 1853 he was admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of South Australia. He practised in the Local Court at Mount Barker, South Australia and then set up an office in Adelaide.
In June 1857 he was elected to the House of Assembly for Yatala and was attorney-general in the Torrens ministry from 1 to 30 September.
He was elected a member for Sturt in 1862 and was again attorney-general in the Dutton and Ayers ministries in 1863, 1865, 1867 and 1868. He had been made a Queen"s Counsel (Queen's Counsel) in 1865 and in January 1870 resigned from parliament to become crown solicitor and public prosecutor.
In March 1881 he was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court. Andrews was an excellent public prosecutor and had the attributes of a good judge.
His health however gave him few opportunities of showing this during the short time he was on the bench.
In private life he was an amateur viticulturist, planting 17 acres (69,000 m2) of vines. He made some good wines during the 1860s. The Hundred of Andrews, proclaimed in 1864, an agricultural district straddling the Hill River near Spalding, was named after him.