The distance from Grand Bay in the south east corner of
Dominica to Government House in Roseau is not much
more than ten miles but for His Excellency Dr.
Nicholas Joseph Orville Liverpool, President of the
Commonwealth of Dominica, it has been an
extraordinary journey by way of Britain, most of the
Western world, and every country of the Commonwealth
Caribbean.
Young Nick was born in Grand Bay, a renowned
centre for culture. He was educated at the Dominica
Grammar School in Roseau and preceded to the
University of Hull in Yorkshire, the home town of
the famous abolitionist, William Wilberforce. He was
called to the Bar at the Inner Temple in London in
1961 but with a much greater vision he went on to
complete his PhD from Sheffield University in 1965.
After a post of Lecturer in Law at the University of
Ghana and a research fellowship at McGill in Canada,
he returned home to practice briefly in Dominica and
then to open a Law School for the Government of the
Bahamas.
In 1973 he accepted his first appointment as a
judge of the High Court of Antigua and Montserrat,
but he was too young and much too vigorous to spend
the rest of his life merely sitting on a Bench. And
when the light out of the west beckoned he joined
the UWI Law Faculty at Cave Hill in 1974. During his
tenure at the Faculty of Law of for almost two
decades he served in every capacity as Dean, Head of
Teaching to member of many commissions in Barbados;
and consultant to various Regional and International
organisations too numerous to mention on various
legal matters throughout the Caribbean Community.
His research, advocacy and training make him
equally recognisable in Roseau, and in other parts
of the Region. He has contributed to the training
and certification of several outstanding Caribbean
professionals: among whom are judges (including a
Chief Justice), Ministers of Government (including
one Prime Minister), Attorneys General, Solicitors
General, Directors of Public Prosecutions and many
others
It is with self assuredness that he accepted the
appointment as Justice of Appeal under the Peoples
Revolution Government of Grenada, considered by many
at that time to be a demonstration of his courage
and commitment to regional justice system He also
served as Justice of Appeal in Belize from 1990 to
1992; Justice of Appeal in the Eastern Caribbean
Supreme Court from 1992 to 1995; in the Bahamas from
1996 to 1997; and again in Belize from 1996 to 2000.
These are just a few illustrations of the many
major regional roles to which must be added
approximately one hundred scholarly articles and
several monographs of great intellectual weight.
But let us not think that Dr. Nick lives the
motto ‘all work and no play’, after all he found the
time, considerable time, to father and raise five
children. A colleague has described him as ‘a man
for all seasons; full of life and a most mischievous
sense of humour.’ Indeed, he is a famous prankster
and his close family and friends would attest to
this uncannily wicked streak that is part of his
uniqueness. most of which cannot be admitted as
‘evidence in court’
No doubt Justice Liverpool's character was honed
in the famous village of Grand Bay, of legendary
cultural richness that has produced many musical
bands, traditional dancers, and cultural activists.
His Excellency still comes out on Carnival Tuesday
to play mass in his favourite carnival band called 'For
Old Time Sake' and is ever present at village
feasts throughout his native isle. When not playing
mass, or pursuing his passion for dominoes, or
attending to affairs of State, he can be found at
his farm in the hills of Bellevue Chopin tending his
crops of vegetables, citrus, dasheen, yams and
Dominica plantain, producing enough to spare for his
friends. His Excellency is, indeed, a man from the
people, chosen by the people and working for the
people – the very essence of democracy.
His Excellency Dr. Nicholas Liverpool is indeed
one of the 'Acclaimed Legal Luminaries of the
Caribbean' of his generation and a truly deserving
candidate for the conferral "The Order of the
Caribbean Community".