in
Vanity Fair, 1909 He was born in
Dublin and educated at Dr. Stacpoole's School in Kingstown (now
Dún Laoghaire) and
Trinity College Dublin, graduating
BA in 1874. After being called to the Irish
bar in 1878, Campbell was made an Irish
Queen's Counsel in 1892 and six years later was elected
Irish Unionist MP for the seat of
Dublin St Stephen's Green. The following year he was called to the English bar, and in February 1902 was elected a
Bencher of
Gray's Inn. Campbell became
Solicitor-General for Ireland in 1901, and in 1903 he was elected to the
House of Commons as representative for
Dublin University. He was made the country's
Attorney General in 1905, being appointed an Irish
Privy Counsellor, and in 1916 became
Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. Considerable controversy surrounded the efforts to appoint him a judge: the initial proposal to appoint him Lord Chancellor of Ireland met with fierce resistance from Irish Nationalists, and great efforts were made to find another position for him. It appears that
Baron Atkinson was asked to retire from the
House of Lords but refused. Pressure was then put on the
Lord Chief Justice of Ireland,
Richard Cherry, who was seriously ill, to step down. Cherry despite his failing health was initially reluctant to do so, but eventually agreed to retire in December 1916.
Maurice Healy in his memoirs remarks that Campbell was considered the finest Irish barrister of his time, with the possible exception of
Edward Carson, but as a judge, he was somewhat fretful and impatient, with a tendency (admittedly not uncommon in judges) to interrupt counsel. ==Irish War of Independence==