Augustus Goldsmid

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Augustus Goldsmid
FSA, FZS
File:Goldsmid, Augustus.jpg
Born 1818
Died 1874
Residence 1 Essex Court, Temple and Conservative and Junior Carlton Clubs [1865]
Old Library Garden Court Temple [1869]
Occupation legal
Society Membership
membership ASL, AI ordinary fellow
ASL Foundation Fellow
left 1873.10.28 resigned
elected_AI 1865
elected_ASL 1865.03.14
clubs Junior Carlton Club
Conservative Club
societies Society of Antiquaries
Zoological Society

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Notes From Elsewhere

Augustus Goldsmid (1818-74), barrister. The nephew of Sir Isaac Lyon Goldsmid and Sir David Salomons, he was called to the Bar at Inner Temple on 18 November 1842, becoming the third professing Jewish barrister (after Sir Francis Goldsmid and Sir John Simon). He was a noted supporter of Jewish emancipation, and came to prominence in his capacity as one of three barristers acting as defence counsel in the case of Miller vs Solomons (1852) in the Court of Exchequer. His mother's brother, David Salomons, had been elected MP, and took an oath in the House of Commons according to a formula binding on his own conscience. Since Salomons voted three times (21 July 1851), having taken what had transpired to have been an unacceptable oath, he was fined £500 for each vote. The 1852 case was an action to recover the unpaid fines from Salomons, who lost; nevertheless Goldsmid published the case. He was promoted to lieutenant in the First Regiment of the Royal Surrey Militia (1853), was in Paris in an official government capacity (1858), and contested the Norwich parliamentary seat as an Independent (1865). He appears by then to have converted to Anglicanism, and his later years were obscure.

Publications

External Publications

Report of the case of Miller vs Salomons, MP with a summary 1852

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

Other Material