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Walter Lewis Sir Walter Lewis Born at Banbury Oxon. On November 13th 1849 and died at his home on Blackheath on September 26th 1930. Though born at Oxon his mother and father settled in County Galway in early 1852. Educated at Queens College Galway he received a B.A. in 1869 and took his M.A. in 1871. He received a gold medal and first class honours in his degree. Lewis entered as a student of the middle temple in 1872; he acquired his knowledge of the law in the chambers of Robert Wallace, Herbert Reed and Robert McCall. He frequently 'devilled' for McCall who was also a graduate of QCG. Legal Life In 1876 he began to practice on the Northern Circuit but this was not to his liking and he switched to the South Wales and Chester Circuit. Suffering from poor health in 1883 and 1884 he accepted an appointment form Lord Derby as a stipendiary magistrate in the county district of Trinidad. He was confirmed as a judge of the Supreme Court in 1893. By 1900 he had left to serve as chief justice of British Honduras. Lewis received a Coronation medal in 1902, a knighthood in 1904 and in 1906 he decided to retire. Some of Lewis's duties in Trinidad were to lie outside the judiciary, he was chairman of the roads commission, the commission on Agriculture and administrator of the Trinidad public service Widows and Orphans Fund and was commended for this work by Joseph Chamberlain. In his leisure time Lewis enjoyed, as an expert navigator, voyaging to various parts of the world. He married Jane Mary Dealy in 1887.
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