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WOOLCOCK, JOHN LASKEY (1862-1929), barrister and supreme court
judge, Queensland, |
son of the Rev. William Woolcock, a Bible Christian missionary, was born at
Truro, Cornwall, England, on 7 November 1862. He came to Queensland with his
father in 1866, and was educated at the Brisbane Grammar School. Having won a
Queensland exhibition scholarship he went to the university of Sydney and
graduated B.A. in 1883. He had a brilliant course and won the gold medal for
English verse, the Wentworth medal for an English esssay, the George Allen and
Renwick scholarships, and the Belmore medal for agricultural chemistry.
Returning to Queensland he qualified as a barrister and was admitted to the
Queensland bar on 6 December 1887. He had in the meantime been private secretary
to (Sir)
Samuel Griffith (q.v.), and in that capacity had attended the colonial
convention at Sydney in 1883, the federal council at Hobart in 1885, and the
Imperial conference at London in 1887. In April 1899 he was appointed Queensland
parliamentary draftsman with the right to continue his private practice, which
was already a large one, and in 1910 he did a valuable piece of work when he
consolidated the Queensland statutes. In December 1926, with the general
approval of the profession, he was appointed a judge of the supreme court and
began his duties in February 1927. He proved to be an able and hard-working
judge, but died suddenly on 18 January 1929. He married (1) Miss Harper and (2)
Miss Ida Withrington, who survived him with one son and one daughter of the
first marriage and one son and one daughter of the second.
Woolcock was a man of high ideals, was studious and widely read, and had a
great capacity for work. He wrote a good deal on legal questions such as the
liquor act, the local authority act and Friendly Societies law, and was
responsible for annotated issues of the justices' act and the health act. He
also wrote detective stories and verse some of which appeared in the Queensland
press; an example is included in A Book of Queensland Verse. He was a
force in all educational matters and exercised much influence on them in
Queensland. In 1895 with S. W. Brooks he initiated the movement for a public
library at Brisbane, became a trustee when the library was established, and a
member of the board of advice when it was taken over by the government. He was
one of the original members of the university senate and for some years was
chairman of its education committee. He was especially interested in his old
school, the Brisbane Grammar School, of which he became a trustee in 1889, and
chairman of trustees from 1906 until his death. Under his will £100 was
bequeathed to the university of Queensland to found the Gertrude-Mary Woolcock
memorial prize for proficiency in Greek.
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