Sir Charles Eustace HarmanPC (22 November 1894 – 14 November 1970) was an English lawyer and judge who was a Lord Justice of Appeal from 1959 to his retirement in mid-1970.[1]
His brother John Augustus (Jack), only a year and a half his senior, was killed in a 1917 flying accident, as part of his war service with the Royal Flying Corps.[2] Charles's own university career was interrupted by World War I. He was wounded within the first year, at the Battle of Loos, and spent the rest of the war as a prisoner; he used the time to improve his languages.[3]
^ abc"Obituary: Sir Charles Harman – An able and outspoken judge". The Times. 16 November 1970. p. 10.
^Cooper, Stephen (2013). The Final Whistle: The Great War in Fifteen Players. The History Press. ISBN9780752481241.
^Denys B. Buckley, ‘Harman, Sir Charles Eustace (1894–1970)’, rev. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 14 Sept 2015