b. 1823-08-20
               
               d. 1905-11-27
               
               
                  
                  Henry Pering Pellew Crease was born at Ince Castle, Cornwall, on 20 August 1823. He
                     received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Clare College, Cambridge, in 1847, studied
                     law in the Middle Temple, 
London, and was called to the bar in June 1849. He then went to Ontario, where he worked with a surveying and exploring party on
                     
Lake Superior. After losing money he and his family had invested in Canadian canals, he returned
                     to England, only to return again to Ontario in 1858.
In December of that year, he went to 
Vancouver Island to work as a barrister. In January 1860 he was elected a member of the House of Assembly
                     of 
Vancouver Island for 
Victoria district but was criticized for leaning towards the HBC despite his speeches in favour
                     of reform. On 14 October 1861, he was appointed attorney general of the mainland colony
                     of 
British Columbia, settling with his family in 
New Westminster.
When the capital of the colony moved from 
New Westminster to 
Victoria, Crease was obliged to move back to 
Victoria. He was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court of 
British Columbia in May 1870. Crease aspired to the position of chief justice, but he was too old
                     to take the post when 
Matthew Baillie Begbie died in 1894. Crease was knighted in 1896 and retired to his estate in 
Victoria, dying there in 1905.
                     
                     
                        - 1. J. B. Kerr, Biographical Dictionary of well-known British Columbians: with a historical sketch, (Vancouver: Kerr and Begg, 1890), 132.
- 2. Tina Loo, Crease, Sir Henry Pering Pellew, Dictionary of Canadian Biography.
- 3. Kerr, Biographical Dictionary of well-known British Columbians.
- 4. Loo, Crease, Sir Henry Pering Pellew.