b. 1819
d. 1894
Matthew Baillie Begbie is said to have been born on
May 9th, 1819 on a ship in
the Cape of Good Hope. He attended the University of Cambridge and was called to the bar in
1844. In
1858, Begbie's name was put forward for the position of the Judge of
British Columbia. Upon his acceptance, he arrived in
Victoria on
November 16th 1858, and was appointed to the Executive Council of
British Columbia in
1859.
Governor James Douglas worked closely with Begbie, and consulted him on matters of policy and administration—their
relationship
nearly resembling that of proconsul and consul than that of judge and governor.
Begbie was appointed as the first Chief Justice of the province of
British Columbia in
1871.
In court, Judge Begbie was described as
an autocrat of autocrats, hard, irascible, and given to handing down the most extraordinary
judgements.
Posthumously, he became known as “The Hanging Judge,” but popular opinion is divided
on this title. Biographer David R. Williams argues that Begbie
was stern, but the criminal law of the time was also stern and Begbie could do little
to soften its rigours,
and he asserts that
Begbie from his earliest days in British Columbia admired Indians as a race and liked them as individuals.
However, Begbie's inflexible application of English Law on Indigenous communities
resulted in a disproportionate number of executions of Indigenous Peoples: 22 out
of the 27 people he sentenced to death were Indigenous.
Begbie was known
to act as a law unto himself, and as there was no Court of Appeal nearer than London, he generally got his way.
One example of this is Bebgie's sentences following the Chilcotin War, in which a
group of Tŝilhqot'in individuals killed men who were working on
the Bute road in
1864. Although the Tŝilhqot'in were protecting their territory from encroachment, Judge
Begbie sentenced six Tŝilhqot'in Chiefs to death. In a conversation with
James Douglas, Begbie revealed his approach to sentencing practices:
My idea is that, if a man insists upon behaving like a brute, after fair warning,
and won't quit the Colony, beat him like a brute and flog him.
Begbie established a British law in Canada that prioritized justice for European
settlers but not for Indigenous Peoples. This disproportionate incarceration of Indigenous
Peoples continues today.
Begbie spent the last 15 years of his life working on litigation, criminal, and civil
cases; he died in
Victoria on
June 11th, 1894.
- 1. David Ricardo Williams, Begbie, Sir Matthew Baillie, Dictionary of Canadian Biography 12, 2003.
- 2. Welcome, Nobody Knows Him: Lhatŝ'aŝʔin and the Chilcotin War; David R. Williams, Chancery Barrister, '…Then Man for a New Country': Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie (Sidney: Grays Publishing), 1977, 17-18.
- 3. David R. Williams, Chancery Barrister, '…The Man for a New Country': Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie (Sidney: Grays Publishing), 1977, 27.
- 4. David Ricardo Williams, Begbie, Sir Matthew Baillie, Dictionary of Canadian Biography 12, 2003.
- 5. David R. Williams, The Early Years, '…The Man for a New Country': Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie (Sidney: Grays Publishing), 1977, 17-18.
- 6. David R. Williams, Legislator and Politician, '…The Man for a New Country': Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie, (Sidney: Grays Publishing), 1977, 162.
- 7. Sydney George Pettit, Matthew Baillie Begbie, (Victoria: publisher not identified), 1948, 3.
- 8. David R. Williams, 'The Hanging Judge,' '…The Man for a New Country': Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie (Sidney: Grays Publishing), 1977, 129-130.
- 9. David Ricardo Williams, Begbie, Sir Matthew Baillie, Dictionary of Canadian Biography 12, 2003; David R. Williams, Begbie and the Indians, '…The Man for a New Country': Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie (Sidney: Grays Publishing), 1977, 100.
- 10. David R. Williams, 'The Hanging Judge,' '…The Man for a New Country': Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie (Sidney: Grays Publishing), 1977, 141.
- 11. Sydney George Pettit, Matthew Baillie Begbie (Victoria: publisher not identified), 1948, 2.
- 12. Welcome, Nobody Knows Him: Lhatŝ'aŝʔin and the Chilcotin War.
- 13. Ibid.
- 14. David R. Williams, 'The Hanging Judge,' '…The Man for a New Country': Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie (Sidney: Grays Publishing), 1977, 141.
- 15. Government of Canada, Indigenous People in the Federal Correctional System, 5.
- 16. David R. Williams, The Last Circuit, '…The Man for a New Country': Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie (Sidney: Grays Publishing), 1977, 273.