Benjamin Judah Philip

Benjamin Judah Philip in the United States

Benjamin Judah Philip

Judah Philip Benjamin (1811-1884), United States lawyer and statesman, born in Christiansted, Saint Croix Island, taken to Charleston, South Carolina, as a child, and educated at Yale College (now Yale University). He practiced law in New Orleans, Louisiana, and early became prominent in politics, serving first with the Whigs and afterward with the Democrats. He was a U.S. senator from Louisiana from 1853 until that state seceded from the Union in 1861. He then became attorney general in the cabinet of Confederate President Jefferson Davis. During the American Civil War Benjamin also served successively as the Confederacy’s secretary of war and secretary of state. When Davis was captured in 1865, Benjamin escaped with some difficulty to Great Britain. There he began to practice law the following year and in 1869 was appointed Queen’s Counsel, a title recognizing high achievement in the legal profession. Until his retirement in 1883, Benjamin was considered one of the most learned members of the British bar. His Treatise on the Law of Sale of Personal Property (1868) became a legal classic in Britain. (1)

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Notes and References

  1. Encarta Online Encyclopedia

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