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Thomas Sewell

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Monarch
  
George III

Succeeded by
  
Sir Lloyd Kenyon

Name
  
Thomas Sewell

Preceded by
  
Sir Thomas Clarke

Profession
  
Barrister

Role
  
Economist

Thomas Sewell wwwtsowellcomimagestom4bjpg
Died
  
March 6, 1784(1784-03-06)

Influenced
  
Clarence Thomas, Milton Friedman, Steven Pinker, Walter E. Williams

Influenced by
  
Milton Friedman, Friedrich Hayek, Karl Marx

Education
  
Stuyvesant High School, Howard University

Books
  
Basic Economics: A Citizen, Black Rednecks and Whit, A Conflict of Visions, The Vision of the Anointed, Intellectuals and Society

Similar People
  
Walter E Williams, Milton Friedman, Friedrich Hayek, Ann Coulter, Michelle Malkin

Sir Thomas Sewell PC KC (c. 1710 – 6 March 1784) was an English judge and Member of Parliament, and Master of the Rolls from 1764 to 1784.

Sewell was a member of Middle Temple, called to the bar in 1734, and practised in the Chancery courts. He became a bencher of his inn and King's Counsel in 1754, and Treasurer of the Inn in 1765. By 1764, he was thought to be making between £3000 and £4000 a year from his practice, and was popular among religious dissenters as their champion in the courts.

He stood for Parliament in 1754 at Wallingford and was defeated, despite spending more than £2000 (from the Prime Minister's election fund) in the attempt, but was elected in 1758 as member for Harwich. Harwich was a "Treasury borough", where the government candidate was certain of success, but Sewell had his own interest in the town as well, since his father-in-law, Thomas Heath had been its MP earlier in the century.

However, he made little impact in the Commons and at the next election was not re-nominated at Harwich. He stood instead at Exeter, where he was badly defeated despite Prime Minister Newcastle's support, though this time at his own expense rather than the government's. Nevertheless, later in the year he was returned instead as the government candidate at Winchelsea.

In 1761, Sewell was one of two candidates considered for appointment as Solicitor General, but the post went instead to Fletcher Norton. However, in 1764 he was knighted and appointed Master of the Rolls, apparently to the surprise of many including himself, after a number of other candidates had refused the post; he held it until his death twenty years later. He was also made a member of the Privy Council.

Quotes

Socialism in general has a record of failure so blatant that only an intellectual could ignore or evade it
Much of the social history of the Western world - over the past three decades - has been a history of replacing what worked with what sounded good
It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance

References

Thomas Sewell Wikipedia


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