Born in
Whitehall, he was the third son of
Joseph Phillimore, a well-known
ecclesiastical lawyer. Educated at
Westminster School and
Christ Church, Oxford, where a lifelong friendship with
W. E. Gladstone began, his first appointment was to a clerkship in the board of control, where he remained from 1832 to 1835. Admitted as an advocate at
Doctors' Commons in 1839, he was called to the bar at the
Middle Temple in 1841, and rose very rapidly in his profession. He was engaged as counsel in almost every case of importance that came before the admiralty, probate or divorce courts, and became successively master of faculties, commissary of the deans and chapters of
St. Paul's Cathedral and
Westminster Cathedral, official of the arch deaconries of
Middlesex and London, and chancellor of the dioceses of
Chichester and
Salisbury. In 1853, he entered the
House of Commons as
Member of Parliament for
Tavistock. A moderate in politics, his energies were devoted to non-party measures, and in 1854 he introduced the bill for allowing
viva voce evidence in the ecclesiastical courts. He sat for Tavistock until 1857, when he offered himself as a candidate for
Coventry, but was defeated. He was appointed judge of the
Cinque Ports in 1855,
Queen's Counsel in 1858, and advocate general in admiralty in 1862. In 1867, he was sworn a member of the Privy Council and took his place as a member of the Judicial Committee. As a member of the Judicial Committee, one of his notable decisions was in the
Guibord case, concerning church–state relations in Canada. In 1875, in accordance with the
Public Worship Regulation Act 1874, he resigned, and was succeeded by
Lord Penzance. When the
Judicature Act came into force the powers of the admiralty court were transferred to the High Court of Justice, and Sir Robert Phillimore was therefore the last judge of the historic court of the Lord High Admiral of England. He continued to sit as judge for the new admiralty, probate and divorce division until 1883, when he resigned. He wrote
Ecclesiastical Law of the Church of England,
Commentaries on International Law, and a translation of
Lessing's
Laokoon. He married, in 1844, Charlotte Anne, daughter of John Denison of Ossington Hall, Newark. He was
knighted in 1862, and created a
baronet in 1881. He died at
Shiplake, near
Henley-on-Thames, on 4 February 1885. His eldest son,
Walter, also distinguished as an authority on ecclesiastical and admiralty law, became a judge of the high court in 1897 and was elevated to the peerage as
Baron Phillimore in 1918. ==Arms==