Henry Hene
Henry Hene or Henn was an English-born judge who had a distinguished career in Ireland, and held the office of Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer.
Background and early career
He was the eldest son of Hugh Henn, who was a page of the bedchamber to James I and Charles I and was appointed joint Keeper, with his brother, of the Queen's Garden, Greenwich in 1639. Henry's mother was Katherine Bickerstaff, daughter of Anthony Bickerstaff of Croydon. Sir Henry Henn or Hene, first of the Hene baronets, was his uncle.Henry entered the Inner Temple in 1645 and was called to the Bar in 1653. Although he became a Bencher of the Inner Temple, his practice at the English Bar was not particularly successful and he moved in 1669 to Ireland, where he had relatives. He was admitted to the King's Inns and his Irish practice prospered: he was appointed Second Serjeant in 1670 and a Commissioner of Appeals in Revenue in 1671.
Judicial career
He became third Baron of the Court of Exchequer in 1673 and went regularly as judge of assize to Connaught; this became the subject of a well-known satire, Elegy on the Pig that followed Chief Baron Henn and Baron Worth from Connaught to Dublin. When John Bysse died in 1680 the Lord Lieutenant suggested that Sir Richard Reynell, 1st Baronet should be the new Chief Baron. However, the anti-Catholic hysteria engendered by Popish Plot was at its height and Reynell was suspected of Roman Catholic leanings. Charles II preferred Henn, as he was a staunch Protestant and a man with strong connections at Court.After King Charles's death, Henn's Protestantism made him unacceptable to the new Catholic King James II, and he was removed from office in 1687, retiring to his parents' house Rooksnest, in Tandridge, Surrey. After the Revolution of 1688, unlike some of Charles II's Irish judges, he showed no interest in returning to the Bench. He lived in retirement at Tandridge till his death in 1708.