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BENT, ELLIS (c.1783-1815), judge-advocate of New South Wales,
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was probably born in 1783. His date of birth is sometimes given as 1779, but
he was the second son of Robert Bent, and his elder brother, Jeffery Hart
Bent (q.v.), who was born in 1780, stated in February 1816, that when Ellis
Bent died he was "little more than thirty-two years old" (H.R. of A.,
ser. IV, vol. I, p. 181). Educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge, he graduated B.A.
in 1804, and M.A. in 1807, was called to the bar in November 1805, and in May
1809 was appointed judge-advocate of New South Wales. He arrived at Sydney on 1
January 1810 on the same Vessel as Governor
Macquarie (q.v.) and found that his incompetent predecessor, R. Atkins, had
left his office in much confusion. Bent set himself to clear this up, and in the
following year addressed a letter to the Earl of Liverpool describing the
administration of justice in the colony, and making many suggestions for its
betterment. The most important of these were that a supreme court should be
established with a judge and two magistrates sitting with him, and that there
should be trial by jury. Macquarie, who had found Bent most helpful to him,
recommended that if the plan were adopted, Bent should be made the first judge.
At a later date he suggested that Jeffery Hart
Bent (q.v.), a brother of the judge-advocate, should be appointed an
assistant-judge. Ellis Bent was, however, passed over, and the position of judge
was given to his brother. Ellis Bent had been treated with great consideration
by Macquarie in connexion with the erection of a house for his use, but became
at odds with the governor on account of the delay in building a suitable court
house. Macquarie also considered that Bent did not treat him with proper
respect, and he could not persuade him to frame port regulations in accordance
with his wishes. Like his brother, Bent disagreed with Macquarie on the question
of the treatment of emancipists, and in February 1815 the governor, after
setting out the position in a dispatch to Earl Bathurst, asked that Bent should
be instructed to treat him with "more respect and deference, and that Your
Lordship will define in express terms how far Mr Bent is subject to my orders
and control and how far he is bound to assist me with his legal advice when
called upon for that purpose". As a result Bent was recalled, but before the
news of this could reach Sydney he died there on 10 November 1815. He left a
widow and four children, and a fifth was born subsequently. A pension Of £200 a
year was granted to Mrs Bent in 1817 and she returned to England.
Ellis Bent was an amiable, hardworking and competent official. He was no
doubt encouraged by his brother in his opposition to the governor, and the fact
that he was in bad health from the time of his arrival, and often overworked,
did not help matters. Macquarie appears to have acted with both moderation and
consideration.
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