James Chambers QC (1863 – 11 June 1917) was an Irish lawyer and Unionist politician.
Chambers was called to the Bar in 1885, serving in the North-East Circuit.
In 1902 he took silk, and three years later was elected a bencher of King's Inns.
He sat as Unionist Member of Parliament for South Belfast from 1910 to 1917[1] and was appointed Solicitor-General for Ireland in March 1917, in succession to James O'Connor, who became Attorney General.
an excerpt from a speech he made on the Home Rule debate He was one of the 10 signatories on the first page of the Ulster Covenant, as reported in the book Ulster's stand for Union: Chambers died in June 1917.