(Redirected from John Clarke MacDermott, Baron MacDermott)'John Clarke MacDermott, Baron MacDermott',
MC PC (NI) (
April 12,
1896 –
July 13,
1979) was a
Northern Irish politician and lawyer who was
Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland from
1951 to
1971.
Born in
1896, MacDermott was educated at
Campbell College,
Belfast, and the
Queen's University of Belfast. After serving with the Machine Guns Corps in
France,
Belgium and
Germany during the
First World War, for which he was awarded the
Military Cross, MacDermott was called to the Irish
bar in
1921. Eight years later he was appointed to determine industrial assurance disputes in Northern Ireland, and in
1931 he became a lecturer in
Jurisprudence at Queen's University, teaching for four years. In
1936 he was made a
King's Counsel, and two years later he was elected to the
Northern Ireland House of Commons as an
Ulster Unionist member for
Queen's University.
In
1940 MacDermott was appointed Minister of Public Security in the Northern Ireland Government, and the following year became the Province's
Attorney General. In
1944 he resigned his parliamentary seat on appointment as a
High Court Judge for Northern Ireland, and three years later was made a
Lord of Appeal in Ordinary, becoming a
life peer as 'Baron MacDermott', of Belmont in the City of Belfast.
Having been made a
Northern Ireland Privy Counsellor seven years earlier, Lord MacDermott was admitted to the
British Privy Council in
1947. Four years later he was appointed Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland, a post he held for twenty years. He was also Pro-Chancellor of his alma mater until
1969, and in
1958 chaired the commission on the
Isle of Man Constitution. He died in
1979.