George Archer-Shee

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George Archer-Shee with his father Martin, at around the time of the trial.
George Archer-Shee with his father Martin, at around the time of the trial.

George Archer-Shee (May 6, 1895October 31, 1914) became a British cause célèbre in 1910 when the issue of whether he stole a five shilling postal order ended up being decided in the High Court.

Archer-Shee had become a cadet at Osborne Naval College in January 1908. On October 7, shortly after the start of the autumn term, a fellow cadet, Terence Back, received a postal order from a relative for five shillings. That afternoon, Archer-Shee received permission to go to the Post Office outside the grounds of the school to buy a postal order and a stamp, as he wished to buy a model train costing fifteen shillings and sixpence. When he got back to the college, the theft of Back's postal order had been reported and the clerk-in-charge of the Post Office, Miss Tucker, was sent for. She produced the cashed postal order for Back, and stated that only two cadets had visited that afternoon: the same cadet who had bought a postal order for 15s 6d had also cashed the 5s order.

Contents

[edit] Defence of his honour

The postal order Archer-Shee was accused of cashing.
The postal order Archer-Shee was accused of cashing.

When the Admiralty wrote to Archer-Shee's father Martin (an official of the Bank of England) telling him that his son was being expelled, he instantly responded that "Nothing will make me believe the boy guilty of this charge, which shall be sifted by independent experts". The family were devout Roman Catholics and the background in bank management meant that the sons had all been brought up to regard misuse of money as a particularly heinous thing. Martin Archer-Shee engaged lawyers and through the connections of George's half-brother Martin Archer-Shee (junior) who was active in politics and later, in 1910, to become a Member of Parliament, obtained the services of Edward Carson as the family's barrister: Carson was regarded as one of the best barristers in practice at the time, and had a son who had been to Osborne. The family challenged the decision through a petition of right against the Crown. The College, in the grounds of Queen Victoria's favourite home on the Isle of Wight, educated and trained Royal naval cadets for their first two years, from 14 to 16.

[edit] Legal hearing

The postal order which Archer-Shee indisputably bought.
The postal order which Archer-Shee indisputably bought.

It took many months to bring the case to trial, but it was heard from July 26 1910. On the fourth day, July 29, the Solicitor-General, Sir Rufus Isaacs, accepted the statement that George Archer-Shee did not cash the postal order "and consequently that he is innocent of the charge. I say further, in order that there may be no misapprehension about it, that I make that statement without any reserve of any description, intending that it shall be a complete justification of the statement of the boy and the evidence he has given before the court." The concession appears to have happened when the Secretary to the Admiralty came to the conclusion early in the case that their witnesses were so weak that they would probably lose, although those that had given evidence stood up well. However Carson had successfully shown that the elderly postmistress, Miss Tucker, could easily have been mistaken.

[edit] Compensation

The family then began to press the Admiralty to pay restitution. The First Lord of the Admiralty said on March 16, 1911 that he thought the House of Commons would think it inappropriate; the family then circulated a booklet giving their side of the case. On April 6, the Naval Estimates came up for debate, but many Members of Parliament raised the Archer-Shee case (both for and against, though most supported compensation) that the Admiralty were forced to concede a Judicial hearing to decide the matter, lest the business be 'lost' (a Parliamentary term meaning postponed to a future day). Viscount Mersey reported that the family should be paid £4,120 to cover their costs, and £3,000 compensation "in full settlement of all demands", and the money was paid that July.

[edit] Later life

After his expulsion from Osborne, Archer-Shee returned to Stonyhurst College (where he had been educated before going to Osborne). He went to the United States to work, but returned home to enlist in the Army at the start of World War I. He was commissioned as a Lieutenant in the First Battalion, the South Staffordshire Regiment, and was killed at the First Battle of Ypres in 1914. His name is inscribed on the war memorial in the village of Woodchester in Gloucestershire where his parents lived.

Cadet Terence Back remained in the Royal Navy and was promoted to be a Captain from 1939. He served on the Arctic Convoys during the Second World War.

The case was the inspiration for the play The Winslow Boy by Terence Rattigan. Although the legal details of the case follow very closely the real story, the family relations are almost entirely fictionalised.

[edit] Source

  • The Archer-Shee Case by Ewen Montagu (David and Charles, Newton Abbot, 1974) ISBN 0-7153-6774-9