Nicholas Barham
Nicholas Barham was an English lawyer and Member of Parliament.
Early life
Barham was a native of Wadhurst, Sussex, where his family had been settled there for some generations as yeoman farmers and ironmasters. Nicholas Barham was called to the bar at Gray's Inn in 1542, became an 'ancient' of that society 24 May 1552, Lent reader in 1558, and was made serjeant-at-law in 1567, having previously been returned to parliament as member for Maidstone, of which town he also appears to have been recorder.Treason trials
William Dugdale does not place Barham in the list of queen's serjeants until 1573. He is, however, so designated in papers relating to the trial of Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk, for high treason in conspiring with Mary, Queen of Scots to depose Elizabeth, in 1571–2. He was given the conduct of the prosecution. From a letter from Sir Thomas Smith to Lord Burghley it appears that the rack was employed on a witness Banister, one of the duke's agents. When the duke, after the confession of the witness had been read, remarked that 'Banister was shrewdly cramped when he told that tale,’ Barham, who had been present at the examination, replied 'No more than you were.' The trial of the duke took place in Westminster Hall 16 January 1572.In the following February Barham was engaged in prosecuting the duke's secretary, Robert Higford, at the Court of Queen's Bench, on the charge of adhering to and comforting the queen's enemies. Higford was found guilty and, like his master, condemned to death.