Sir Charles Hall KCMG PC QC (3 August 1843 – 9 March 1900)[1] was a British lawyer and politician.
He was called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn on 17 November 1866, and built up a large practice in the Admiralty court and the south-east of England, becoming a Queen's Counsel in 1881.
[4] In the 1885 United Kingdom general election he was returned as Conservative Member of Parliament for the Chesterton division of Cambridgeshire.
[3] In 1892 he was appointed Recorder of London, an office which could be combined with being in Parliament, but not with a court position (thus he resigned as attorney-general to the Prince of Wales).
This article about a Conservative Member of the Parliament of the United Kingdom representing an English constituency and born in the 1840s is a stub.