founded by Sir Roger Wilbraham Wilbraham was educated at
Shrewsbury School and
Cambridge University. He became a
barrister, and was admitted to
Gray's Inn in London in 1576. On 13 February 1585, he was appointed
Solicitor-General for Ireland, a position he held for 17 years, although he frankly admitted that he saw it as the pathway to a more senior position at the English Court. During his years in Ireland, the Irish judiciary were notorious for
corruption, and for bitter feuds among themselves; shortly before his arrival in Ireland
Nicholas Nugent, the
Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas, had been hanged for
treason on very thin evidence, after a trial presided over by hostile colleagues. Wilbraham's attitude to
judicial misconduct was cynical and pragmatic: even where a judge's conduct on occasion was disgraceful, if he generally gave good service to the Crown then, unless he was convicted of
treason or another
capital crime, Wilbraham argued that he should not be punished for it, or removed from office. Wilbraham himself undoubtedly gave good service to the Crown: in 1597 the
Privy Council of Ireland, in a letter to Sir
Robert Cecil lamenting the inefficiency of the Irish law officers (especially the recently deceased
King's Serjeant,
Arthur Corye), exempted Wilbraham from their criticisms, as "he hath taken more care and pains than all the rest". He did much to increase the Crown revenues, and although he made a substantial profit in the process, this was not then regarded as
corruption. In 1597 a complaint was made that he was keeping all the fees for making grants on the
Exchequer of Ireland for himself, rather than sharing them with the other law officers and the
Chief Remembrancer (a senior official in the Exchequer). The Dublin government appears to have ignored the complaint, no doubt because of its firm belief, expressed forcefully in its letter to Cecil the same year, that Wilbraham was the only one of the law officers who did his job efficiently. In 1590-3, when the
Attorney-General for Ireland, Sir
Charles Calthorpe, was suspended from duty, Wilbraham coped efficiently with his double workload. In his last years as Solicitor-General, he spent almost all of his time in England, rebuilding his legal practice. ==Later career==