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William Adam (1751-1839)
Scottish
lawyer and politician, eldest son of John Adam of Blair-Adam,
Kinross-shire, and nephew of the architect noticed above, was
born on the 2nd of August 1751, studied at-the universities of
Edinburgh and Glasgow, and passed at the Scottish bar in 1773.
Soon afterwards he removed to England, where he entered parliament
in 1774, and in 1782 was called to the common law bar. He withdrew
from parliament in 1795, entered it again in 1806 as representative
of the united counties of Clackmannan and Kinross, and continued
a member, with some interruptions, until 1811.
He
was a Whig and a supporter of the policy of Fox. At the English
bar he obtained a very considerable practice. He was successively
attorney and solicitor-general to the prince of Wales, one of
the managers of the impeachment of Warren Hastings, and one of
the counsel who defended the first Lord Melville when impeached.
During his party's brief tenure of office in 1806 he was chancellor
of the duchy of Cornwall, and was afterwards a privy councillor
and lord-lieutenant of Kinross-shire. In 1814 he became a baron
of Exchequer in Scotland, and was chief commissioner of the newly
established jury-court for the trial of civil causes, from 1815
to 1830, when it was merged in the permanent supreme tribunal.
He died at Edinburgh in February 1839.
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