Justice Susan Kiefel, a Queenslander, will become the first woman to occupy the nation's most senior judicial role. Credit:Robert Shakespeare Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said on Tuesday "Susan Kiefel's story is one that is an inspiration". The Queenslander left school at 15 and began her working life as a legal secretary before studying law part-time through the barristers admission board. "She went on after practising at the bar to win a Master of Laws at the University of Cambridge," Mr Turnbull said. Justice Kiefel told Fairfax Media she was "deeply honoured by the appointment and very conscious of the responsibilities of the office of chief justice".

Justice Susan Kiefel at her swearing in to the Australian High Court in 2007. Credit:Glen McCurtayne "I hope that I bring to the role my experience – I've been a judge for 23 years and I was a barrister for 16," Justice Kiefel said. "I've been on the High Court for nine years. And of course I'm bringing my experience of the world as all of the judges do." Hon Justice Susan Kiefel AC, Australia's first female High Court chief justice. Credit:Robert Shakespeare The 62-year-old said she "learned to work hard at an early age" but she was "ambitious so I enjoyed it".

"I absolutely loved my time at the bar, but I always knew that I wanted to be a judge," Justice Kiefel said. New High Court appointee, Justice James Edelman. Mr Turnbull said Justice Edelman was "a different generation to most of the other judges of the High Court" but at the age of 34 the "precocious" Rhodes Scholar was already a professor of law at Oxford. "He has established himself by practising at the Western Australian bar and indeed at the London bar," Mr Turnbull said. In 2011 Justice Edelman was appointed to the Western Australian Supreme Court by his close friend and then WA Attorney-General Christian Porter, who is now federal social services minister.

Last year, he joined the Federal Court based in Brisbane. The Scotch College Perth old boy is the youngest person to have been appointed to the WA Supreme Court, and the fourth-youngest person to be appointed to the High Court. The youngest High Court appointment remains former federal Labor leader and Attorney-General Herbert Vere "Doc" Evatt, who joined the bench in 1930 at the age of 36. Attorney-General George Brandis said Justice Kiefel had emerged as the "overwhelmingly favourite candidate" to replace Chief Justice French following consultation with the state attorneys-general and other leaders of the profession. A former judge of the Federal Court and Queensland Supreme Court, Justice Kiefel was the first woman in Queensland to be appointed Queen's Counsel, or silk, in 1987.

When she was sworn in as a High Court judge in 2007, she was greeted by school children waving placards saying "2/7 = a good start". The High Court now boasts three women on the seven-judge bench, following the appointment of Justice Michelle Gordon last year. The appointment of Justice Kiefel to the top job was widely tipped in legal circles, and comes as a welcome distraction from damaging headlines about the government's dealings with the former solicitor-general Justin Gleeson, SC. The real surprise was who would be appointed to fill the vacancy created by Justice Kiefel. There had been speculation an Adelaide-based judge – South Australian chief justice Chris Kourakis or Federal Court judge Anthony Besanko – would be appointed to the bench in a first for South Australia.

James Allsop, the Sydney-based chief justice of the Federal Court and former president of the NSW Court of Appeal, had also been touted as a contender. Justice Kiefel is among the most senior judges on the High Court bench. Justices Virginia Bell, Stephen Gageler and Patrick Keane were appointed during the Rudd and Gillard governments. After her appointment by the Howard government, Justice Kiefel said that she was a "lonely tree" in a forest of men during her early years at the Queensland bar but women were now "part of the landscape". Chief Justice French, who was appointed to the top job in September 2008, had previously served as a judge of the Federal Court. Follow us on Twitter