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Pollock, F. (Frederick), 1783-1870

LC control no.no 95004673
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingPollock, F. (Frederick), 1783-1870
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Variant(s)Pollock, Frederick, 1783-1870
Birth date[1783-09-22, 1783-09-23]
Death date18700823
Place of birthLondon (England)
Place of deathHatton (London, England)
Field of activityLaw Politics, Practical Justice, Administration of Photography
AffiliationTrinity College (University of Cambridge) Great Britain. Parliament Great Britain. Exchequer Royal Society (Great Britain) Photographic Society Club
Profession or occupationLawyers Politicians Attorneys general Judges Photographers
Found inA letter to Sir F. Pollock, Her Majesty's Attorney General ... on the subject of local courts, 1843.
NUC pre-56 (hdg.: Pollock, Frederick, Sir, 1783-1870)
Rules of the Photographic Society Club, 1856: leaf 5 recto (list of club members, beginning with "President: The Right Hon. Sir Frederick Pollock, F.R.S., Lord Chief Baron")
Seiberling, Grace. Amateurs, photography and the Victorian imagination, 1986: page 142 (in Biographical appendix, by Carolyn Bloore: the Right Honorable Sir Jonathan Frederick Pollock, P.C., Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer; Baron Pollock; active as a photographer; father of Photographic Society Club members Arthur Julius Pollock and his half-brother Henry Alexander Radclyffe Pollock, and a club member (and club president) himself)
Oxford DNB, June 3, 2014 (Pollock, Sir (Jonathan) Frederick, first baronet (1783-1870), judge; born London, 22 or 23 September 1783; Frederick (as he was always known) graduated BA in 1806 and MA in 1809 from Trinity College, Cambridge; commissary to the university from 1824 to 1835; entered the Middle Temple on 5 October 1802 and was called to the bar on 27 November 1807; admitted to the Inner Temple on 16 November 1824, and a bencher of his own inn from 22 November 1827; took silk [became King's Counsel] on 12 June 1827 and was added to the royal commission on the common-law courts on 10 March 1831; on 2 May 1831, became a tory member of Parliament for Huntingdon, which he defended in 1832 and for which he was returned unopposed at four subsequent elections; knighted on 29 December 1834 on accepting the office of attorney-general in Sir Robert Peel's first administration, to 1835; resumed the same office in Peel's second administration from 6 September 1841; become lord chief baron of the Exchequer on 15 April 1844 and was made a serjeant on 18 April; retired on 12 July 1866 and received a baronetcy on 24 July; moved to Hatton, Middlesex, and resumed the studies of his youth; elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1816; also FSA and FGS and a member of the council of the London Photographic Society; died at Hatton on 23 August 1870)
Associated languageeng