The title Baron Russell of Killowen was created three times for father, son and grandson, all of them appointed to be Lords of Appeal in Ordinary.
The titles are Frederick Maugham (1866–1958) and Mark Romer (1866–1944) were also high-ranking judges appointed to be Lords of Appeal in Ordinary, the former in 1935 and the latter in 1938.
He was later appointed Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain in 1938 and elevated to be Viscount Maugham, of Hartfield in the County of Sussex in 1939 on his retirement, as was customary.
The titles held by members of the grocer Sainsbury family are Michael Havers was made a life peer upon being appointed to the role of Lord Chancellor under Margaret Thatcher.
His sister, Elizabeth Butler-Sloss, was later made a life peer upon recommendation by the House of Lords Appointments Commission.
In 1937, after divorcing her first husband, she married Hugh Gaitskell, who went on to become Minister for Fuel and Power, Chancellor of the Exchequer, and leader of the Labour Party from 1955 until his sudden death in 1963.
After a career as a civil servant in the Home Office, and as a consultant in the private sector specialising in policing, he too was ennobled in 2011.
The two middle generations have been given life peerages (Lord Hurd of Westwell notably serving as Foreign Secretary under Margaret Thatcher and John Major), and the youngest married the daughter of The Most Hon.
The titles are: John Beavan (1910–1994), a left wing newspaper editor and Labour Party MEP, was ennobled in 1970.
Quintin Hogg, 2nd Viscount Hailsham disclaimed his hereditary peerage in 1963, allowing him to take up a seat in the House of Commons.
Lord Londonderry's elder daughter Lady Jane Vane-Tempest-Stewart married Sir Max Rayne in 1965.
Lord Londonderry's younger daughter Lady Annabel Vane-Tempest-Stewart married Sir James Goldsmith (knighted in Harold Wilson's so-called 'lavender list'); one of their sons, Zac Goldsmith, was given a life peerage by Prime Minister Boris Johnson to enable him to stay on in the Cabinet after losing his Richmond Park seat in the 2019 snap General Election.
The titles are The following life peers are related: Peggy Garnett married Douglas Jay in 1933, but later divorced.
Lord Oakeshott of Seagrove Bay is apparently closely related to Lady Bottomley of Nettlestone, but it is unclear how exactly.
The titles are: Julia Schwab, who married Professor Anthony Neuberger, is Britain's second female Rabbi (serving at the South London Liberal Synagogue from 1977 to 1989).
She was later ennobled in 2004, sitting with the Liberal Democrats, but joined the Crossbenches after being appointed Senior Rabbi at the West London Synagogue[46] in 2011.
John, considered by his brother Michael (leader of the Labour Party from 1980–3) to be the best orator and the "ablest member of the family", was a Liberal politician.
Terence was a leader of the Ulster Unionist Party and antepenultimate Prime Minister of Northern Ireland from 1963 to 1969.
During the leadership election, O'Neill cast the tiebreaking vote in Chichester-Clarke's favour, although it has been suggested that this support was not due to a familial connection but rather politicking.
Chichester-Clarke was later ennobled with the title Baron Moyola, of Castledawson in the County of Londonderry (1971, Ulster Unionist Party) Both Barnett Janner (1892–1982) and his son, Greville Ewan Janner (1928–2015), served as Members of Parliament for Leicester West, Greville directly following his father.
His son, a former Treasurer of the Conservative Party, was ennobled in David Cameron's Resignation Honours List.
The titles are Just under a year before succeeding to the Earldoms, Robert Lindsay (then styled Lord Balniel) was given a life peerage.
The titles are John Ernest Vaizey (1929–1984), an economist specialising in education, was given a life peerage in Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson's so-called 'lavender list'.
Angus Edmund Upton Maude (1912–1993), was a Conservative MP and rose to the position of Paymaster General.
At the 1983 General Election, Angus stood down from the Commons (receiving a life peerage) and Francis entered Parliament.
Francis was ennobled with a life peerage when he stood down from Parliament in 2015, and was subsequently appointed a Minister of State for Trade and Investment.
Baron Beaumont of Whitley, of Child's Hill in Greater London (1967), who was in line to succeed to the Allendale Barony (currently subsidiary to the Viscountcy).
Baron Cavendish of Furness, of Cartmel in the County of Cumbria (1990), who is in the line of succession to the Dukedom of Devonshire.
Lady Arden of Heswall (2018), entitled to be "designated by the courtesy style and title...of "Lady"" by Royal Warrant[80] as a Supreme Court Justice, married Baron Mance, of Frognal in the London Borough of Camden (2005)[81] in 1973, whom she replaced on the Supreme Court when he retired.
While explicitly not a life peerage, but a judicial title similar to those held by the Senators of the College of Justice, she would have received a life peerage under the Appellate Jurisdiction Acts had she theoretically been made a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary before the creation of the Supreme Court under the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, as her husband was.