Birketts dates back to 1863 when Benjamin Birkett – newly-qualified at the ripe old age of 42 – arrived in Ipswich to set up a practice. It grew and prospered in the town quite unremarkably for over 100 years. The first real game-changing moment for the firm came on 1 October 1989 when it entered into a three-way merger with Westhorpes and Smith Morton & Long. Birketts and Westhorpes were Ipswich’s two leading firms at the time. The former had
Birketts dates back to 1863 when Benjamin Birkett – newly-qualified at the ripe old age of 42 – arrived in Ipswich to set up a practice. It grew and prospered in the town quite unremarkably for over 100 years. The first real game-changing moment for the firm came on 1 October 1989 when it entered into a three-way merger with Westhorpes and Smith Morton & Long.
Birketts and Westhorpes were Ipswich’s two leading firms at the time. The former had strengths in litigation and private client; the latter in commercial and property, so the synergies were evident. It was about as literal a merger as it gets – the firms were neighbours and so walls were knocked through to connect the two.
The final firm in the threesome, Essex’s Smith Morton & Long, didn’t fit in quite so well, however. Cultural differences, combined with a recession, eventually saw a demerger of that firm in 1994.
By that time, however, Birketts was home to a group of a dozen or so partners whose ambition was greater than being the pre-eminent firm in Ipswich. In 2001 they hired its first non-lawyer CEO – then a novelty – and set about becoming the leading player in East Anglia.
Previously an Ipswich-only firm, a Norwich office opened 2004 and another in Cambridge in 2008. A Chelmsford presence was acquired in 2010 through a merger with £6m firm Wollastons, completing the geographical diamond.
Organic growth has followed in the wake of that merger, with revenue rising from £23.8m in the post-merger year of 2010/11 to £48.1m in 2017/18. The firm aspires to grow revenue between 8 to 10 per cent per annum, and with profit growth of between 4 and 7 per cent.
The firm acts mainly for SMEs, though it has a number of FSTE 100 clients. It has a very broad practice, including some areas unusual for a regional firm, such as a shipping disputes team.
Jonathan Agar, Birketts’ second CEO, came from Deutsche Bank and has led the firm since 2007.
Even before 2020, about 35 per cent of Birketts’ business was sourced in London. In May of that year the firm decided to actually open an office in the capital, merging with insurance boutique EC3 Legal.
Birketts’ leadership 1965 to present
Managing partner | Senior partner | |
1965 | Geoffrey Barnard | |
1985 | John Mitson | |
1989 | Douglas Cotton | Chris Cocksedge |
1995 | Bob Wright | |
1999 | Douglas Cotton | |
CEO | Senior partner | |
2001 | Alistair Lang | |
2006 | Nigel Farthing | |
2007 | Jonathan Agar | |
2016 | James Austin |