Background
Sir William Grantham was born 23 October 1835 in Lewes, Sussex, England to George Grantham and Sarah Grantham(née Verrall).
Sir William Grantham was born 23 October 1835 in Lewes, Sussex, England to George Grantham and Sarah Grantham(née Verrall).
He was educated at King"s College School, and was called to the bar in 1863.
Sir William Grantham married Emma L Wilson on the 15 February 1865 in Sussex, England. Sir William Grantham and Emma had 7 children. William Wilson Grantham, Emma Laura Grantham, Constance Grantham, Frederick Grantham, Gertrude Grantham, Maud Grantham and Muriel Georgina Grantham.
As a judge, he was seen as competent but with a weakness for commenting on cases in a way that brought him into conflict with various groups, a habit that eventually led to hints in the newspapers that he should retire.
His tenure as a judge was mainly uncontroversial until 1906, when, in a series of decisions on election petitions following the general election of that year, in Bodmin, Maidstone and Great Yarmouth, he was seen as favouring the Conservatives. A censure motion was proposed in the House of Commons and led to a vigorous debate, but the government declined to take it further, possibly because of the precedent it would set.
Five years later, an indiscreet speech to the grand jury in Liverpool led to the judge being rebuked by the Prime Minister, H. H. Asquith, in the House of Commons, "one of the severest ever dealt to an English judge by a minister of the crown". He died later that year, of pneumonia, in his house in Eaton Square, London, aged 76.
21st United Kingdom Parliament. 22nd United Kingdom Parliament. 23rd United Kingdom Parliament.
He was a Conservative Member of Parliament (Member of Parliament) for East Surrey from 1874 to 1885 and was elected as for Croydon in 1885, but resigned in 1886 on his appointment as a judge of the Queen"s Bench Division.