Frank Ereaut

Sir Frank Ereaut (May 6, 1919 – September 11, 1998) was Bailiff of Jersey from 1975 to 1985. Sir Peter Crill was appointed Deputy Bailiff in 1974 and then succeed Sir Frank Ereaut as Bailiff of Jersey in January 1986.

Early years

Ereaut was born in London, the son of Herbert Parker Ereaut (who predeceased him having been killed in active service in 1918) and May Julia Cobbold. Ereaut was the grandson of James J Ereaut, a Connétable of St Saviour.[1]

Ereaut was educated at Victoria College Prep School in Jersey, Tormore Preparatory School in Deal and Cranleigh School.[2] He was a Kitchener Scholar at Exeter College, Oxford.[3] During the Second World War, her served in the Royal Army Service Corps, attaining the rank of Captain.

Legal career

Ereaut was called to the English and Jersey Bars in 1947.

He was appointed HM Solicitor General in 1958 and HM Attorney General in 1962. Appointment as Deputy Bailiff came in 1969 and he became Bailiff of Jersey in 1975, succeeding Sir Robert Le Masurier. His time as a Crown Officer coincided with Jersey's negotiations with the United Kingdom Government about the constitutional implications for Jersey of the United Kingdom's accession to the European Economic Community.[4]

He was described as 'the gentlest of gentlemen'.[5]

Honours

Ereaut was knighted in 1976.

Personal life

Ereaut married Kay Fitzgibbon from County Cork. They had one daughter. In February 1986, he was appointed a director of Standard Chartered Bank (CI).[6]

External links

References

Who's Who in the Channel Islands 1967 (Jersey: Channel Island Publishing Co Ltd, 1967)

  1. Jersey Evening Post, 11 October 1918.
  2. 'Sir Frank Ereaut', obituary in The Times, 8 October 1998.
  3. Oxford University Gazette, 5 November 1998 http://www.ox.ac.uk/gazette/1998-9/weekly/051198/coll.htm
  4. Ralph Vibert, Memoirs of a Jerseyman (Jersey: La Haule Books, 1991), ch 19; M Syvret and J Stevens, Balleine's History of Jersey (Phillimore, 1981) pp 272-273.
  5. 'Sir Frank Ereaut', obituary in The Times, 8 October 1998.
  6. The Times 25 February 1986.


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