Andrew Caldecott

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Sir Andrew Caldecott

In office
12 December 1935 – 28 October 1937
Preceded by Sir William Peel
Succeeded by Sir Geoffrey Alexander Stafford Northcote

Born October 26, 1884(1884-10-26)
Kent, England
Died July 14, 1951 (aged 66)
Spouse Olive Mary
Evelyn May
Alma mater Exeter College, Oxford
Profession civil servant, colonial administrator

Sir Andrew Caldecott (Chinese: 郝德傑) (1884 - 1951) was a British colonial administrator.

Contents

[edit] Early Life, Education

Sir Andrew Caldecott was born on 26 October 1884 in Kent, England. His father was a cleric. Caldecott was educated at Uppingham, and Exeter College, Oxford, where he became an Honorary Fellow in 1948.

[edit] Colonial Services career

Between 1907 and 1935, he held various appointments in the Malayan Civil Service, including:

Later in his time in Malaya, Caldecott served as:

Through his experience in the Malayan administration, Caldecott was famous for his ability to settle quarrels between different ethnic groups.

[edit] Governor of Hong Kong

In 1935, Caldecott was appointed governor of Hong Kong. His tenure was the shortest in Hong Kong colonial history, for he was appointed the second last governor of Ceylon a little more than a year later to handle the threat to the British administration caused by the overwhelming national liberation movement in Ceylon. When arriving in Hong Kong to assume the Governorship, Caldecott, unusually, elected to wear civilian dress, something that would not happen again until the arrival, in 1992, of the last colonial Governor, Chris Patten.

It was during Caldecott's tenure that Hong Kong's Kai Tak Airport received its first regular arrival, the "Dorado" and the Queen Mary Hospital opened as an adjunct hospital to the Hong Kong University (the hospital is now under the control of the Hong Kong Hospital Authority). His tenure also saw the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War, with more than 100,000 refugees from the Chinese Mainland flooding into Hong Kong to escape the conflict.

[edit] Personal life

Caldecott married Olive Mary in 1918. They had one son and one daughter. After Olive Mary's death in 1943, Caldecott married again 1946 to Evelyn May. Caldecott died on 14 July 1951.

[edit] Awards and honours

[edit] Writings

  • History of Jelebu
  • Not Exactly Ghosts, London: Arnold, 1947 (Including: "A Room in a Rectory", "Branch Line to Benceston", "Sonata in D Minor", "Autoepiphany", "Whiffs of the Sea", The Pump in Thorp's Spinney", "Light in the Darkness", "Decastroland", A Victim of Medusa", "Fits of the Blues", "Christmas Reunion", "In Due Course".)
  • Fires Burn Blue, London: Arnold, 1948 (Including: "An Exchange of Notes", "Cheap and Nasty", "Quintet", "Authorship Disputed", "Final Touches", "What's in a Name", "Under the Mistletoe", "His Name was Legion", "Tall Tales but True", "A Book Entry", "Seeds of Remembrance", "Seated One Day at the Organ".)
  • All the stories in Not Exactly Ghosts and Fires Burn Blue were reprinted by Ash-Tree Press in the collection Not Exactly Ghosts (2002).

[edit] Places named after Andrew Caldecott

In Hong Kong, Caldecott Road, a road in New Kowloon, is named after him.

In Singapore, Caldecott Hill, Caldecott Close and Andrew Road are named after him, and Olive Road is named after his first wife.

[edit] See also

Government offices
Preceded by
Sir William Peel
Governor of Hong Kong
1935–1937
Succeeded by
Sir Geoffrey Northcote
Preceded by
Maxwell MacLagan Wedderburn, acting
Governor of Ceylon
1937–1944
Succeeded by
Sir Henry Monck-Mason Moore
Languages