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Robert McQueen, Lord Braxfield

The Right Honourable
Lord Braxfield
LordBraxfield3.jpg
Lord Braxfield
Lord Justice Clerk
In office
13 December 1776 – 30 May 1799
Personal details
Born (1722-05-04)4 May 1722
Lanark
Died 30 May 1799(1799-05-30) (aged 77)
St George's Square
Spouse(s) Mary Agnew; Elizabeth Ord
Alma mater University of Edinburgh
Profession Advocate

Robert McQueen, Lord Braxfield (4 May 1722 – 30 May 1799) was a Scottish advocate and judge.

McQueen was born on 4 May 1722, near Lanark, son of John McQueen of Braxfield.

He studied in Edinburgh and was admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in 1744. In 1759 he was appointed an Advocate Depute appearing for the Crown in prosecutions. He often appeared in more than 15 cases per day and earned £1900 in a single year.

He became a judge in 1776 and took the title Lord Braxfield.

In 1788 he became Lord Justice Clerk, the leading judge in Scotland. Explicitly taking the view that "Government in this country is made up of the landed interest, which alone has a right to be represented" he took an active role in the suppression of the Friends of the People Society in the trials and sentences passed on Thomas Muir and others. To accomplish this he "invented a crime of unconscious sedition". A famous quote of his in this respect was "Let them bring me prisoners, and I will find them law."

In 1795 he oversaw the trial and imprisonment of Sir Archibald Gordon Kinloch of Gilmerton for the murder of his half-brother Sir Francis Kinloch. This rare event saw one man kill another at least in part to inherit his baronetcy.

He died at home in George Square, Edinburgh, on 30 May 1799, aged 77, and was buried at Lanark on 5 June.

He married, first, Mary, daughter of Major James Agnew of the 7th dragoon guards, and niece of Sir Andrew Agnew of Lochnaw, Wigtownshire, bart.; they had four children:

Braxfield married, secondly, Elizabeth, daughter of Robert Ord, lord chief baron of the exchequer in Scotland, by whom he had no issue.

Sir Henry Raeburn painted his portrait shortly before his death.

Braxfield has a notoriety in Scotland, due to the harsh way that he dealt with those who appeared before him, most famously in telling a defendant that "Ye're a vera clever chiel, man, but ye wad be nane the waur o' a hanging". In a recent survey of Scottish historians, Braxfield was identified as one of the "vilest villains" in Scotland's history.


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