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Samuel Heywood (chief justice) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Samuel Heywood (chief justice)
Samuel Heywood (1753–1828) was an English serjeant-at-law and a Chief Justice of the Carmarthen Circuit of Wales. ==Life== Heywood was born in Liverpool, Lancashire to Benjamin and Phoebe Heywood, ''née'' Ogden. He was educated at Warrington Academy, and Trinity Hall, Cambridge, though as a Unitarian did not attend college chapel, and could not graduate as he would not subscribe to the Church of England's 39 Articles.〔G. M. Ditchfield, (‘Heywood, Samuel (1753–1828)’ ), ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, Jan 2008, accessed 29 Dec 2008. Heywood is not mentioned at all in Venn, J. & J. A., ''Alumni Cantabrigienses''.〕 He studied law at the Inner Temple, rising to prominence as a lawyer and barrister. He was called to the Bar in 1778. Based at Lancaster, Lancashire, he was appointed Serjeant-at-Law (1795) and also Chief Justice of the Carmarthen Circuit of Wales (1807). He was one of very few religious dissenters holding a national public office at this time. He was a fierce opponent of the high church aspects of Anglicanism.
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