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Star who raised the bar

Daughter's biography of a distinguished legal pioneer tells a vivid and comprehensive story

November 2, 2012 15:32
Leading lady: Rose Heilbron and fellow judges at Westminster Abbey in 1950

By

Jonathan Goldberg

2 min read

This biography of an extraordinary woman — sub-titled: The Story of England’s First Woman Queen’s Counsel and Judge — is written by her daughter Hilary, herself now a distinguished commercial Silk.
Rose Heilbron was the Margaret Thatcher of the law, a woman who broke through the glass ceiling by sheer force of personality and talent. Yet both would indignantly have rejected the title of “feminist”. Like Thatcher, she had a Denis as a tower of strength. This was her doctor husband Nat who was devoted to her for more than 60 years.

The list of firsts in Rose’s career was unique. She was the first woman law student to be awarded a scholarship by Gray’s Inn, and later became their first woman Treasurer; the first woman to defend in a murder trial; the first woman Silk at the precocious age of 34 in 1949; the first woman Recorder in 1956; the first woman ever allowed to sit at the Old Bailey in 1972; and the first woman Leader of the Northern Circuit in 1973. Alas, she was only the second ever woman High Court Judge, Dame Elizabeth Lane pipping her to the post.

She proved a fine judge until her retirement in 1988. Born and bred and long practising in what was then still the great port city of Liverpool, she became a media darling despite the stifling rules which then existed at the Bar against self-publicity. These she always respected faithfully.

The local paper wrote of her at age 24 “A dark vivacious Jewess has pleaded in the Birkenhead Magistrates Court for the first time”. It was the start of an unrequited love affair with the press, which never subsided. They invariably called her “Britain’s Portia.” Although she never gave an interview or volunteered a photograph or commented on a case the whole of her career, her dramatic good looks and brilliant courtroom style brought early success and fame.