Anthony St Leger
Quick Facts
Biography
Sir Anthony StLeger (the younger) (c.1535-1613) was an English-born judge in Ireland who held the office of Master of the Rolls in Ireland.
Family
There is someconfusion about his parentage. It is often said that he was the third son of Sir Anthony St Leger, Lord Deputy of Ireland, and his wife Agnes Warham. However, both Burke's Peerage, and Francis Elrington Ball in his definitive study of the pre-Independence Irish judiciary, state that he was the nephew, not the son, of the elder Sir Anthony, and thathis parents wereSir Anthony's brotherGeorge St Leger andhis wifeThomasine Heath.
Career
He was born around 1535, at Leeds, Kent. He entered Gray's Inn in 1562 and was called to the Bar in 1574. He was made an Ancient of Gray's Inn in 1579 and was Readerof the Inn in 1589.
In 1593 he was made Irish Master of the Rolls, with a knighthood. Crawford statesthat he was chosen for the office because of the Crown's strong preference forsending Englishjudges toIreland, and because of a vague belief that the St. Leger family's long association with Ireland fitted him for the task. St Legerhimself did not share this belief:he went to Ireland under protest, made regularvisits home and petitioned for English offices such as Master of the Court of Requests. His absences from duty were frequent enough to meritan official rebuke: in 1599 the Privy Council of Ireland sent a sharp request to him to return to Dublin at once, since his absence was making the conduct of judicial business almost impossible.
He did not entirely neglect his official duties: he negotiated with Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone in 1594, was a commissioner for the Plantation of Munster, and went regularly on assize. However his desire to return to England was as strong as ever, and he finally obtained leave to retire in 1609. He continued to advise the Crown on Irish affairs, anddied in Cork early in 1613, presumably while on amission to Ireland.His body was brought back to England and at his own request he was buried beside his first wife Eleanor inthe church of St. Sepulchre-without-Newgate in London. Mary, his second wife, is buried in St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.
Personal life
He bought Wierton House, in Boughton Monchelsea in Kent, from the Norton family, and acquired Bobbing Court in Kent through marriage. His will makes generous provision for his widow, andcontains legacies to his Clifford stepchildren, numerous cousins and the poor of Leeds. Sir Henry Wotton, the notedpoet and diplomat, received a bequest of a ring; since St Leger's third wife Aphra was a Wotton there may have been a family connection between the two men.
St Leger married firstly Eleanor, daughter of Richard Markham of Sedgebrook, Lincolnshire; they hadone daughter, Joan. Eleanor died in 1599. He married secondly as her fourth husband Mary, daughter of Francis Southwell of Wyndham Hall, Norfolk; her third husband had been the leading soldier Sir Conyers Clifford. They had two children, Anthony and Frances (who lived for only four days). Their sonAnthony was knighted in 1627, and died in 1661. After Mary's death in childbirthin 1603 he married Aphra Wotton, who outlived him by many years.