Edmund Pelham
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Sir Edmund (or Edward) Pelham (c.1533 – 1606) was a member of the Pelham family of Laughton, East Sussex. He was a judge in Ireland who held the office of Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, and was the first judge to hold assizes in Ulster.
His career suffered due to suspicions that he was secretly a Roman Catholic. These suspicions were due partly to his marriage into a recusant family, and partly due to the open indifference which both he and his wife showed to the Anglican faith.
Pelham was the fifth son of Sir William Pelham of Laughton in East Sussex and his second wife Mary Sandys, daughter of William Sandys, 1st Baron Sandys of the Vyne and Margaret Bray. Sir William Pelham, Lord Justice of Ireland (died 1587) was his full brother, and Sir Nicholas Pelham (1517-60) was his older half-brother.[1]

Early career
Pelham's father died when he was about five years old. Little is recorded of his life until 1563 when he was admitted to Gray's Inn; he was called to the bar in 1574.[1] He remained at Gray's Inn for 40 years, becoming Reader and Ancient of the Inn,[1] but he does not seem to have advanced far in his legal career, although he was elected to the House of Commons as member for Hastings in 1597.[2] The fact that his wife Ellen Darrell belonged to an openly Roman Catholic family no doubt hindered his career. His enemies accused him, if not of actual Catholic sympathies, at least of being a "cold professor" of the Protestant faith. He rarely and only with reluctance attended Church of England services,[3] and even more rarely took Holy Communion, at a time when failure to attend Church once a week and take Communion at least once a year was a breach of the law, and evidence of recusancy.[4]