Coleridge established a successful legal practice on the western circuit. From 1853 to 1854 he held the post of secretary to the
Royal Commission on the City of London. In 1865 he was elected to the
House of Commons for
Exeter for the
Liberal Party. He made a favourable impression on the leaders of his party and when the Liberals came to office in 1868 under
William Ewart Gladstone, Coleridge was appointed Solicitor-General. In 1871 he was promoted to Attorney-General, a post he held until 1873. In 1871 he was also involved in the high-publicity
Tichborne Case. In 1873 he was described by the Manchester-based ''
Women's Suffrage Journal'' as a "firm and consistent" supporter of women's suffrage. In November 1873 Coleridge succeeded Sir
William Bovill as Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, and in January 1874 was raised to the
peerage as
Baron Coleridge, of Ottery St Mary in the County of Devon. In 1875, the three English common law courts (the
Court of Queen's Bench, the
Court of Common Pleas, and the
Court of the Exchequer) merged to become divisions of the new
High Court of Justice. The head of each court (Lord Chief Justice
Sir Alexander Cockburn, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas Lord Coleridge, and Chief Baron of the Exchequer Sir
Fitzroy Kelly) continued in post. After the deaths of Kelly and Cockburn in 1880, the three divisions were merged into a single division, with Lord Coleridge as Lord Chief Justice of England. In 1884, he was elected as a member of the
American Philosophical Society. Despite his health failing towards the end of his life he remained in this office until his death on 14 June 1894, aged 74, at his house in
Sussex Square in
Paddington. ==Family==