Alexander Adair Roche, Baron Roche PC (24 July 1871 – 22 December 1956),[1] known under his second surname, was a British barrister and law lord.
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He was the second son of William Brock Roche and his wife Mary Fraser, daughter of William Fraser.[2] Roche was educated at Ipswich School and studied then at Wadham College, Oxford, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1894 and a Master of Arts in 1913.[2] He was called to the bar by the Inner Temple in 1896 and went to the Northern Circuit.[3]
Roche became a King's Counsel in 1912 and was elected a bencher in 1917.[4] Later in that year, he was appointed to the High Court of Justice (King's Bench Division), on whose occasion he was created a Knight Bachelor.[4] He served as chairman of the Oxfordshire Quarter Sessions from 1932 and held the same post in the Central Agricultural Wages Board from 1940.[5]
In 1934, Roche was made a Lord Justice of Appeal and was sworn off the Privy Council.[5] On 14 October 1935 to fill a vacancy he was nominated a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary receiving the traditional life peerage as Baron Roche, of Chadlington, in the County of Oxfordshire.[6] Roche retired already in 1938 and a year thereafter he became Treasurer of the Inner Temple.[7]
On 22 March 1902, he married Elfreda Gabriel, third daughter of John Fenwick and had by her two sons and a daughter.[7]