John George Phillimore (1808–1865) was an English barrister, known as a jurist and Liberal Party politician.
The
eldest son of Joseph Phillimore, he was born on 5 January
1808, and was educated at Westminster School. On 28 May 1824 he
matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford, of which he was
faculty student, and graduated B.A. in 1828, having taken a second class in the
classical schools; he proceeded M.A. in 1831.
From
1827 to 1832 Phillimore held a clerkship in the Board of Control for India, and
on 23 November 1832 was called to the
bar at Lincoln''s Inn,
where he was elected a bencher in 1851. In 1850 Phillimore was appointed reader
in civil law and jurisprudence at
the Middle Temple. In 1851 he took silk,
and in the following year he was appointed reader in constitutional law and legal history to
the Inns of Court.
Phillimore
represented Leominster as a
Liberal in the Parliament of 1852–7. He spoke on free trade,
legal reform, and the secret ballot. He died on 27 April 1865 at his
residence, Shiplake House, Oxfordshire.