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Power, prestige and prosperity are bywords for colonial
dynasties like the à Beckett family. But unlike the Clarkes, the Chirnsides
and the Armytages, the à Becketts inherited a queerness out of character
with their upper-class standing. Take for example, this passage in Joan
Lindsay’s (1896-1984) delightful book “Time Without Clocks” (1976)
describing the return to Australia with her husband (Sir) Darryl Lindsay
(1889-1976);
“My Father whom we later learned had shown no marked
enthusiasm at the prospect of an artist son-in-law had bicycled down to the
wharf to meet us...A firm believer in established marriage, the Church of
England, Debentures and the Melbourne Club, in small matters my Father had
small regard for the conventions...he had arrived at the Pier bolt upright
on his old-fashioned push bike across whose handlebars was strapped a
long-handled tennis racquet shaped like an egg-spoon. He wore much washed
white and grey striped flannel pants and for reasons best known to himself
an almost threadbare sports jacket of Harris tweed. His handmade buckskin
shoes were dazzlingly white. His tweed cap several sizes too large was
pulled hard down over bright blue eyes half hidden by tufts of greying
eyebrows”.
That Joan Lindsay’s father was at the time a senior
King’s Counsel as well as an acting judge of the Supreme Court made no
difference. The à Beckett heritage took little heed to matters of convention
and fashion.
Theyre à Beckett Weigall (1860-1926) was a third
generation member of the à Beckett dynasty, a dynasty synonymous with the
law. Indeed, the à Becketts were associated with the Bar and the Bench ever
since the arrival in 1846 of Theyre’s great-uncle Sir William à Beckett
(1806-69) who was appointed a resident judge (1846-52) and later the first
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (1852-57). However, it was Theyre’s
grandfather, Thomas Turner à Beckett (1808-92, Melbourne General Cemetery)
who was responsible for the à Beckett name being associated with the law
until at least the death of William Weigall (1874-1959; The Necropolis,
Springvale) in 1959. By then, the à Beckett name had lost its place in the
public’s consciouness and focus had shifted to another branch of the dynasty
- the artistic Boyds.
Born on 10 February 1860 in Elsternwick, Melbourne,
Theyre was the eldest child of seven children to London-born parents Theyre
Weigall (1831-1911) and Marian née à Beckett (1841-1919, CofE “O” 93) who married in
April 1859. Theyre senr arrived in 1854 on board the John Banks not long
after his future wife. The story goes that Weigall was chosen as associate
to Justice Henry Stonor after his appointment to the Supreme Court Bench
before constitutional government. An accusation of being a party to improper
practices led to Stonor’s hasty return to England to successfully clear his
name leaving Weigall “a strange young man in a strange young country”.
Though admitted to the Bar in December 1860, he never practiced law, instead
serving in the Treasury as Curator of Intestate Estates until his retirement
in 1895; he died on 20 November 1911 aged 80 and is buried with his
son Alfred (1863-88) in CofE “U” 122. Theyre jnr and his brothers attended
the traditional à Beckett family school - Melbourne Boys’ Grammar - from
1870 to 1875 under the brilliant Dr. John Bromby (1809-89, Melbourne General
Cemetery). Head of the school in his final two years, he won the
matriculation classics exhibition; Sir Edward Mitchell, KC (1855-1941, St.
Kilda Cemetery) was a fellow student and life long friend in the law and
sport.
From Melbourne Grammar to Melbourne University, (Trinity
College, 1875-80) Weigall followed the only vocation then known to the à
Becketts - law (LL.B., 1880; LL.M., 1886). Not that he needed any
encouragement; his uncle (Sir) Thomas à Beckett (1836-1919, St. Kilda
Cemetery) was a rising equity lawyer and lecturer in law of procedure at the
University (1874-81). It was while at university that Weigall became a
respected rival and lifelong friend of (Sir) Isaac Isaacs (1855-1948,
Melbourne General Cemetery) and the two were to share first-class honours
with Weigall winning the exhibition in 1877-78. Called to the Bar on 5 April
1881, Weigall read in his uncle’s chambers specialising in equity law,
procedure and company law; when Uncle Tom was elevated to the Bench in
September 1886, Weigall took over a large part of the practice. Weigall’s
expertise was recognised in the administration of trusts and the
“comparatively firm foundation...of trusts in Victoria ...is attributed in
no small degree to him”. By the late 1890s, Weigall’s rising reputation
attracted the attention of The Australasian who noted his courtroom manner
when “unravelling a complex argument, his habit is to support his right
elbow with the other arm, while he saws the air with his outstretched hand,
fixing his gaze the while on a remote part of the ceiling”. A King’s Counsel
from 20 November 1906 until his death, Weigall practised widely in the
Victorian Supreme Court and the High Court; in 1919 he was one of only three
practising KCs in Victoria.
Outside the law, Weigall loved the open air. Tennis was a
life long passion; he was president of the Lawn Tennis Association of
Victoria (1909-25). And apart from cycling, he loved nothing more than the
monthly walks in the country with the Wallaby club.
Described as a “kindly, humorous and witty man, charming
and courteous”, Weigall’s elevation to the Bench and likely Knighthood was
assured, but for his opposition to capital punishment. First offered an
appointment to the Supreme Court in 1920, he refused, but later accepted a
temporary appointment (1923-26) - a position he held until his sudden death
from pneumonia on 8 June 1926. As a judge, his rulings were sound, though
slow, verbose and cautious earning him the good humour of his peers.
Acknowledged as an equity specialist, he never sat in criminal cases.
The end for Weigall came suddenly and unexpected. Having
sat in Chambers on the Thursday before his demise, he was suffering a mild
cold. When the Courts rose, he walked to South Yarra with Justice (Sir)
Frederick Mann (1869-1958) much for the worse of wear and his condition
developed into influenza. On his doctor’s orders, he remained in bed
throughout the weekend until his condition became serious on Sunday night
and he died the following morning. News of Weigall’s demise caused an
outpouring of grief amongst the legal profession like no other then or
since. The Chief Justice Sir William ‘Iceberg’ Irvine (1858-1943) spoke with
great emotion when he said;
“The great catastrophe which has fallen upon us makes it
extremely difficult for me to give expression to our feelings...His loss to
the Bench and to the community is irreparable. Though all people knew of him
as a distinguished lawyer for many years, it is only those of us who were
closely associated the few short years that he occupied a position on the
Bench, who are capable of estimating the true measure of his greatness as a
judge…he was capable of mastering any judicial problem that came before
him...his place will be almost impossible to fill. He was a fast friend, a
loyal colleague, and a very distinguished judge”.
And to no one was the news of Weigall’s death more severe than Sir Isaac
Isaacs who said of his fellow judge that “he never lost a friend or made an
enemy”. The cream of the legal profession from Sir Adrian Knox (1863-1932),
Chief Justice of the High Court down attended an impressive funeral at the
Brighton General Cemetery (CofE “V” 212) that left the Weigall family home
St. Margaret’s - 151 Alma Road, East St. Kilda punctually at 3:00pm.
Unpunctuality was anathema to Weigall, as Joan Lindsay put it, the à
Becketts were “a family of clock winders, conscientious followers of road
maps and railway guides”.
The
above story
written by Travis M. Sellers and originally published in The Cemetorian -
Brighton Cemetorians Inc based on the entry below published previously on
www.brightoncemetery.com.
Weigall was born on 10
February 1860 at Elsternwick, Melbourne the son of Theyre Weigall (d 1911),
a clerk and Marion née à Beckett (d 1919); his mother was a first
cousin twice removed of Emma Minnie à Beckett (1858-1936; Fawkner
Memorial Park) who in 1886 married Arthur Merric Boyd (1862-1940;
Fawkner Memorial Park) and thus the fabled Boyd artistic dynasty was born.
Educated at Melbourne Boys’ Grammar School (1870-75) and Trinity College,
Melbourne University (LL.B., 1880; LL.M., 1886) where (Sir)
Isaac Issacs (Melbourne General Cemetery) was a fellow student and a
life-long friend, upon being admitted to the Bar on 5 April 1881, Weigall
read in the chambers of his uncle (Sir) Thomas à Beckett (St. Kilda
Cemetery) specialising in equity, procedure and company law; he later took
over the practice when à Beckett was elevated to the bench in 1886.
Appointed a King’s Counsel in 1906, Weigall practiced widely in the High
Court of Australia; adverse to capital punishment he refused an appointment
on the Supreme Court bench. He did however accept the position of
acting-judge (1923-26) during when three judges took leave. He died
from influenza on 8 June 1926 at his home St. Margaret's - 151 Alma
Road, East St. Kilda with an estate sworn for probate at £63,699; survived
by his wife Anne née Hamilton, daughter of Tasmanian Governor Sir
Robert (1836-95). Described as “a kindly, humorous and witty man,
charming and courteous…a vigorous man of simple tastes and boyish
enthusiasms, with a spare frame and bright, blue eyes”, his funeral was
attended by the cream of the legal profession including Sir Adrian Knox
(1863-1932), Judge
William Moule (q.v.) a fellow
member of The Bohemian’s club, Sir Edward Mitchell (St. Kilda
Cemetery), Sir Isaac Isaacs (“To no one was the news of the death…a more
severe blow than to…Isaacs”), Hugh
Macindoe (q.v.), Sir Leo Cussen (Boroondara Cemetery),
(Sir) William McArthur (Camperdown Cemetery), (Sir) Frederick Mann
(1869-1958), Sir Frank Duffy (1852-1936), (Sir) George Rich (1863-1956) and
Henry Bournes Higgins (Dromana Cemetery). (Sir) Frederic
Eggleston (1875-1954), State Attorney-General who also attended his funeral
said that “there was no member of that profession who was regarded with more
affection and concern”; while Chief Justice (Sir) William ‘Iceberg’ Irvine
(1858-1943) said “his loss to the bench and to the community would be
great…he was a fast and true friend, a loyal colleague and a distinguished
lawyer”. One of his three daughters, (Lady) Joan Lindsay (d 1984)
author of the Australian classic ”Picnic at Hanging Rock” (1967)
noted that while her father was “a firm believer in stabilised marriage, the
Church of England, Debentures and the Melbourne Club” he was unconventional
in conventions. |

Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |
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Source:
ADB Volume 12 1891-1939 (Smy-Z).
The Argus 9 June 1926 p1 & p18, 10 June 1926
p10.
The Age 9 June 1916 p 8, 10 June 1926 p9.
The Australasian 25 Dec 1897 p1411, 25 Nov
1911 p1402 & 12 Jun 1926 p1469
The Herald 8 June 1926 p1.
The Sun News-Pictorial 9 June 1926 p2 & 10
June 1926 p3.
The Sydney Morning-Herald 9 June 1926 p16.
Lindsay, J., "Time Without Clocks" (1994)
p8-9.
Lindsay, D., “The Leafy Tree. My Family”
(1965) p131-132.
“Liber Melburniensis”, Centenary Edition
(1965) p37.
The Melburnian Vol LI (No.2) 26 Aug 1926
p147-148.
Grimwade, R. (ed), “The Bohemians Melbourne”
(1931).
Dean, A., “A Multitude of Counsellors” (1968)
p185.
Forde, J., “The Story of the Bar of Victoria”
(1913) p249-250). |
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