William Sheppard (barrister)


William Sheppard was an English barrister, known as a legal writer.

Life

Sheppard was baptised at Whitminster, Gloucestershire, at the end of 1595, and entered the Middle Temple in 1620; he was called to the bar in 1629. He lived in Horsley and enjoyed a large country legal practice.
About 1653 Sheppard was invited to London by Cromwell, and made one of the clerks of the upper bench. In 1656 he became a serjeant-at-law, and was nominated with three others to prepare the charters granted to town corporations. In September 1659 he was appointed chief justice in North Wales, by the Rump Parliament.
After the Restoration of 1660 Sheppard was deprived of his offices and left public life. He had six children: John, Elizabeth, Sarah, Samuel, Anne, and Dorothy.

Works

Sheppard wrote legal and religious works:
He also published the Touchstone of Common Assurances ; tradition said he had found it in manuscript in Sir John Doddridge's library, but a connection with Doddridge is no longer accepted. The eighth edition of this work, by Edmond Gibson Atherley, was published in 1826. Sheppard wrote a second part, published with the first, Law of Common Assurances.
A Collection of Choice Declarations, attributed to Sheppard in the first edition of the Dictionary of National Biography, was by William Small.