Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 51.djvu/294

 :: his ‘Posthumous Works’ (1728) the name of the representative patriot was changed to Walpole. Some of his poems are inserted in Nichols's ‘Collection,’ vii. 133–49, and in Bell's ‘Fugitive Poetry,’ vi. 111–15. Long letters to and from him are in the correspondence of John Dennis (1721), i. 122–5, and in the works of Aaron Hill (1753), i. 9–19, ii. 406–13 (cf. Notes and Queries, 2nd ser. ii. 423).
 * 1) ‘An Epistle from Sempronia to Cethegus, with Reply’ (anon.), 1713: a satire on the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough.
 * 2) ‘The Proclamation of Cupid, or a Defence of Women: a Poem from Chaucer,’ 1718, reprinted in No. 5 infra.
 * 3) ‘Poems on several Occasions,’ 1719.
 * 4) ‘A new Collection of original Poems’ (anon.), 1720.
 * 5) Posthumous Works, viz. ‘Tragedy of King Richard I,’ ‘Essays and Poems,’ 1728; edited by his brother, Gregory Sewell.



SEWELL, HENRY (1807–1879), first premier of New Zealand, was the fourth son of Thomas Sewell, a solicitor, who was steward of the Isle of Wight, and of Jane, youngest daughter of John Edwards, curate of Newport. (1803–1864) [q. v.], Dr. James Edward Sewell, and (1805–1874) [q. v.] were his brothers, and Elizabeth Missing Sewell, the novelist, his sister. He was born at Newport on 14 Sept. 1807, and educated at Hyde Abbey school, near Winchester. He qualified as a solicitor, and joined his father's firm in 1826, living first in Newport and then at Pidford. He moved to Brockhurst, but, on the death of his first wife in 1844, went to reside in London, where he interested himself in the Canterbury Association for the Colonisation of New Zealand, ultimately becoming secretary and deputy chairman in 1850.

At the end of 1852 Sewell was sent out to New Zealand to wind up the affairs of the association. Arriving in February 1853, he settled at Lyttleton (whence he afterwards moved to Nelson), and commenced practice as a solicitor. In May 1854 he was elected to the House of Representatives as member for Christchurch, and from June to August was in the Fitzgerald ministry. He became on 7 May 1856 the first premier on the introduction of responsible government, but on 13 May he resigned because the crown declined to allow the ministry full responsibility. On 2 June 1856 he joined the first Stafford ministry as colonial treasurer and commissioner of customs, and held office till April 1859. From 12 July 1861 to August 1862 he was attorney-general in the Fox ministry, in December 1861 giving up his seat in the House of Representatives, and becoming member of the legislative council for Wellington; he continued as attorney-general under [q. v.] till January 1863. He was minister of justice in Sir A. Weld's first ministry from 24 Nov. 1864 to 16 Oct. 1865, and again under Sir J. Fox from 28 June 1869 to 10 Sept. 1872. For his action in joining this government he was violently attacked in the lower house, and on 17 Oct. 1872 made a long and characteristic personal explanation in the council (New Zealand Debates, xii. 733). Thus for more than ten years Sewell was one of the most active and prominent of New Zealand politicians (cf. ).

Sewell left New Zealand in the spring of 1876, and went to reside at Romford, Essex, where his eldest son was curate. He moved to Salisbury Villa, Station Road, Cambridge, where he died on 14 May 1879. He was buried at Waresley, Huntingdonshire.

Sewell married first, on 15 May 1834, Lucinda Marianne, eldest daughter of General William Nedham of Mount Olive, Jamaica, and Widcombe, Bath, M.P. for Athenry in the last Irish parliament, (1798–1800) (she died, 28 July 1844, leaving six children); secondly, on 23 Jan. 1850, Elizabeth (d. 1880), second daughter of Capt. Edward Kittoe, R.N., of Deal.

Sewell was author of ‘A Letter to Lord Worsley on the Burdens affecting Real Property,’ 1846; of ‘Thoughts on the Relations of Men to the External World,’ 1848, and of pamphlets on New Zealand politics.



SEWELL, JONATHAN (1766–1839), chief justice of Lower Canada, son of Jonathan Sewell (1728–1796), the last attorney-general of Massachusetts, was born at Cambridge, Massachusetts, in June 1766, in the ‘old family mansion,’ came over to England with his parents, and was educated at Bristol grammar school. In 1785 he went with his father to New Brunswick and studied law in the office of Ward Chipman, going to Quebec in 1789, where he was called to the bar of Lower Canada on 30 Oct. 1789. In 1793 he became solicitor-general, and in 1795 attorney-general and advocate-general; about the same time he entered the House