- Source: Jack Watermeyer
Henry Ernest Peter "Jack" Watermeyer QC (3 July 1911 – 21 October 2003) was a South African judge and Judge President of the Cape Provincial Division of the Supreme Court from 1979 until 1981.
Early life and education
Watermeyer was born in Wynberg, Cape Town, the son of was the former Chief Justice of South Africa, Ernest Frederick Watermeyer and his wife, Petronella Hester Wege. He was educated at Rondebosch Boys' High School and Bishops and after school he studied law at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. At Cambridge he obtain a B.A. degree and he passed the Law Tripos.
Career
Watermeyer was admitted to the bar in England as a member of the Inner Temple and then returned to South Africa, to become a member of the Cape Bar in 1934. After the outbreak of World War II, he served in the South African Artillery with the 6th Armoured Division in Italy.
Watermeyer returned to the Bar in 1945 and was appointed a King's Counsel in 1950. Shortly after taking silk, he acted as a judge at the Cape Provincial Division and in 1955, he was permanently appointed to the Cape Division, being one of a group of four exceptional appointees: the others were Andrew Beyers, Theo van Wyk and Marius Diemont. He became Judge-President of the Cape Division in 1979 and retired in 1981.
Golf participation
Watermeyer was South African amateur golf champion in 1940 and Western Province amateur golf champion in 1946 and 1949. He served on the Executive of the South African Golf Union for twenty-seven years from 1938 until 1964, and was the non-playing captain of the South African team which played in the 1962 Eisenhower Trophy in Japan. Watermeyer was posthumously inducted into the Southern Africa Golf Hall of Fame, in 2010.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Jack Watermeyer
- George Munnik
- South African Amateur Championship (golf)
- Helm van Zijl
- Ernest Frederick Watermeyer
- Second Matabele War
- List of Privy Counsellors (1936–1952)
- List of Metropolitan Routes in South Africa
- American Shakespeare Theatre
- Eastern Cape Separatist League