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Henry Pollock

Sir Henry Edward Pollock, QC, JP (Chinese: 普樂, 16 December 1864 – 2 February 1953) was an English barrister who became a prominent politician in Hong Kong. He acted as Attorney General in Hong Kong on several occasions, and was once appointed to the same post in Fiji. He also served as Senior Unofficial Member of both the Legislative Council and Executive Council for many years in pre-Pacific War Hong Kong. Along with Sir Paul Chater, then Governor Sir Frederick Lugard (later Lord Lugard) and others, Sir Henry was one of the founders of the University of Hong Kong.

Sir Henry Edward Pollock
普樂爵士
9th Attorney General of Fiji
In office
1901–1903
MonarchEdward VII
GovernorSir William Allardyce
Sir Henry Jackson
Preceded byJohn Symonds Udal
Succeeded byAlbert Ehrhardt
Acting Attorney General of Hong Kong
In office
1896–1901
MonarchVictoria
GovernorSir William Robinson
Sir Wilsone Black (Administrator)
Sir Henry Blake
Preceded bySir W. Meigh Goodman
Succeeded bySir W. Meigh Goodman
14th Senior Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
In office
1917–1941
MonarchsGeorge V
Edward VIII
George VI
GovernorSir Francis May
Claud Severn (Administrator)
Sir Reginald Stubbs
Claud Severn (Administrator)
Sir Cecil Clementi
Thomas Southorn (Administrator)
Sir William Peel
Thomas Southorn (Administrator)
Sir Andrew Caldecott
Norman Lockhart Smith (Administrator)
Sir Geoffry Northcote
Norman Lockhart Smith (Administrator)
Mark Aitchison Young
Preceded byWei A. Yuk
Succeeded byD. F. Landale
2nd Senior Unofficial Member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong
In office
1926–1941
MonarchsGeorge V
Edward VIII
George VI
GovernorSir Cecil Clementi
Thomas Southorn (Administrator)
Sir William Peel
Thomas Southorn (Administrator)
Sir Andrew Caldecott
Norman Lockhart Smith (Administrator)
Sir Geoffry Northcote
Norman Lockhart Smith (Administrator)
Mark Aitchison Young
Preceded byCatchick Paul Chater
Succeeded byArthur Morse
Acting Attorney General of Hong Kong
In office
1919–1919
MonarchGeorge V
GovernorClaud Severn
Preceded byJoseph Horsford Kemp
Succeeded byJoseph Horsford Kemp
Acting Attorney General of Hong Kong
In office
1919–1919
MonarchGeorge V
GovernorClaud Severn
Preceded byJoseph Horsford Kemp
Succeeded byJoseph Horsford Kemp
Acting Attorney General of Hong Kong
In office
1919–1919
MonarchGeorge V
GovernorClaud Severn
Preceded byJoseph Horsford Kemp
Succeeded byJoseph Horsford Kemp
Personal details
Born16 December 1864
London, England
Died2 February 1953(1953-02-02) (aged 88)
Sydney, Australia
SpousePauline Oakley
ProfessionBarrister, Politician

Biography

Family background

 
Sir Frederick Pollock, grandfather of Sir Henry.

Pollock was born to a well-known family in the law. His grandfather, Sir Frederick Pollock, 1st Baronet served as Attorney General for England and Wales between 1834 and 1835 and 1841 and 1844 in the Tory administrations of Sir Robert Peel; one of his many cousins, Sir Frederick Pollock, 3rd Baronet was a renowned professor of jurisprudence in the University of Oxford; another cousin of Pollock, Ernest Pollock, 1st Viscount Hanworth, served as the Master of the Rolls from 1925 to 1935.

Pollock's father was Dr. Arthur Julius Pollock (7 February 1835 – 11 May 1890). He was the eldest son in the second marriage of Sir Frederick Pollock, though he ranked thirteenth among the twenty-four children that Sir Frederick had. Dr. Pollock was a physician and lecturer in the Foundling Hospital and Charing Cross Hospital. He was also a Council member of the Royal College of Physicians.

Pollock was the third child of his mother, Ellen Bailey (? – 25 October 1895). He had an elder sister, Caroline (4 August 1862 – ?), an elder brother, Arthur Julius (21 August 1863 – 28 May 1914), and a younger brother, Charles Frederick (17 July 1866 – 17 July 1919).

Early years

Pollock was born in London, England on 16 December 1864. He spent his early childhood in London and was later admitted to the Charterhouse School. He quit the school in 1882 at the age of 18, and was promptly employed by a bank in Drury Lane. After one year of working, Pollock earned 50 pounds in total, and opted for continuing his study. He was successfully enrolled by the Inner Temple in 1883 and was called to the bar upon graduation in 1887.

In April 1888, seeking for new opportunities elsewhere, Pollock left his family and departed England for the then Crown Colony of Hong Kong. He was soon qualified as a barrister in Hong Kong, and set up his career in the legal profession.

Colonial life

Pollock was substantially valued by the local society not long after his arrival to the colony. For six months from September 1888 to March 1889, he had been appointed by the government as acting Police Magistrate. In 1891, he was appointed unofficial Justice of Peace, and later in 1892, he had served as acting Puisne Judge for the government for half a year. In 1894, Hong Kong was suffered from a severe plague which caused thousands of deaths. Pollock was noted for his work on relief during the plague and was awarded a gold medal by the government afterwards.

From 1896 to 1901, Pollock was appointed by the government as acting Attorney General, and thus became an ex officio member of both the Legislative Council and Executive Council. During his tenure as both an Attorney General and a councillor, his performance was highly regarded by his colleagues, and he was appointed Queen's Counsel as a reward in 1900.[1] In 1902, Pollock was posted to Fiji and served as Attorney General in there. Nevertheless, he did not stay long in Fiji and returned to Hong Kong a year later. A year in Fiji did not weaken his influence in Hong Kong: he went on to serve as a member of the Sanitary Board from March 1903 to February 1906.

Life as councillor

In 1903, under the promotion of the Chamber of Commerce, Pollock had briefly served as acting Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council for around a year. Soon afterwards, he was again nominated by the unofficial Justices of Peace and became a full unofficial member of the council in December 1905. For nearly forty years, Pollock would continuously represent the unofficial Justices of Peace constituency in the council.

In his long tenure in the Legislative Council, Pollock was active in public service and served in a number of committees as member or chairman, including the Peace Celebration and War Memorial Finance Committee, Housing Commission and the Standing Law Committee. During the First World War, Pollock also sat as a Judge in the Appeal Tribunal; he was later reappointed for the same post on the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939.

As early as 1911 and 1912, Pollock was provisionally appointed twice as unofficial member of the Executive Council. However, he lost the chance to be appointed a full unofficial member in November 1915 when he unsuccessfully pressured the then governor, Sir Henry May in a Legislative Council meeting for replacing a vacancy for an unofficial member in the Executive Council through limited election.

Pollock was one of the most prominent activists on constitutional reform in pre-war Hong Kong. He did not give up after his request was abruptly turned down by Sir Henry. In January 1916, he sent a petition compiled with a few hundreds signatures to the Secretary of State for the Colonies, Bonar Law, and called for reform in both the Legislative and Executive Council. According to his proposal, he suggested that more unofficial seats should be created on the two councils. These new seats should be elected by members of the Chamber of Commerce and the unofficial Justices of Peace to let them be more fully represented. Also, Pollock supported the appointment of more Chinese to the two councils.

Pollock's proposal was also rejected by Bonar Law with no reason given. The relationship between Pollock and Sir Henry, was so badly damaged that Pollock was never again chosen to sit on the Executive Council during the governorship of Sir Henry. Pollock only became an unofficial member of the Executive Council after the retirement of Sir Henry, when his successor, Sir Reginald Stubbs, appointed him in 1921. Three years later, Pollock was appointed a Knight Bachelor in the King's Birthday Honours in 1924.[2][3]

Pollock was appointed acting Attorney-General for three times in 1919, 1925 and 1928 respectively. In his capacity as acting Attorney-General, he sat in the two councils as ex officio member rather than unofficial member, and his unofficial seats in the Legislative Council was provisionally elected by his fellow Justices of Peace. In 1917, he succeeded Sir Boshan Wei Yuk as Senior Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council; later in 1926, he also became Senior Unofficial Member of the Executive Council after the death Sir Paul Chater, and therefore became the Senior Member of both two councils. Nevertheless, on 16 September 1928, Pollock had an accidental fall in his home at No. 367, the Peak. He broke his thigh heavily and could not assume his duties in the councils. As a result, another member of the Legislative and the Executive Council, Sir Shouson Chow, temporarily replaced him as Senior Member during his incapacity. Pollock recovered from the fall in December and reassumed his duties again.

 
Sir Henry was one of the founders of the University of Hong Kong. He was later made a life member of the University Court.

Besides his duties in the two councils, Pollock had served as chairman of the Hong Kong Branch of the Navy League, the Chess Club, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the Constitutional Reform Association. He had also served as Commodore of the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club, Secretary of the Odd Volumes Society and corresponding secretary to the Royal Colonial Institute.

Pollock was instrumental to the establishment of the University of Hong Kong as he was one of the founders of the University. Pollock was originally a member of the council of the Hong Kong College of Medicine for Chinese. In March 1908, along with Sir Paul Chater, Sir Kai Ho-Kai and a few other people, Pollock was appointed to the newly founded organising committee of the University of Hong Kong which was chaired by Sir Paul Chater by then governor Sir Frederick Lugard (later Lord Lugard). When the University of Hong Kong was officially founded in 1911, Pollock was appointed a life member of the University Court. Pollock was said to be an active member who frequently attend the Court's meetings, and was noted for his enthusiasm towards the development of the University. In acknowledging his contribution, he received Honorary Doctorates of Law from the University on 5 January 1925.

 
Sir Henry (left) delivered a speech in the foundation stone-laying ceremony of the new school site for St. Stephen's College
in Stanley on 27 April 1928. The ceremony was presided over by then governor Sir Cecil Clementi,(sitting in the front row).

Pollock had close ties with St. Stephen's College as he was one of the guests invited to the foundation stone-laying ceremony of the College's new school site in Stanley in 1928. Furthermore, in 1933, under the assistance from him and Sir Robert Kotewall, the student-actors and student-actresses of the College were allowed to play on the same stage in a fundraising drama event regardless the opposition from the conservative Chinese community.

Final years

On 17 January 1940 and in the beginning of 1941, Pollock was appointed unofficial member of the Legislative and the Executive Council respectively for a further period of four years and five years. However, in December 1941, the Pacific War broke out suddenly and Hong Kong fell into Imperial Japan's hands after a month of resistance. Fortunately, Pollock and his wife were in Australia for health reason at the outbreak of the war, thus they were not in Hong Kong during the Japanese invasion and did not end up in Hong Kong as prisoners of war.

Although the colonial Legislative Council and Executive Council ceased to operate during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong, Pollock was still nominally the Senior Member of the Legislative and Executive Council until the expiration of his terms in 1944 and on 8 March 1946. Pollock's final term as Senior Unofficial Member of the Executive Council traversed the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong and ended after the Liberation of Hong Kong in 1945, but in reality, he never attended any meeting of the two councils after the fall of Hong Kong. The Hong Kong Government later issued a notice in the Hong Kong Gazette in May 1946, thanking Pollock for his contribution to the colony.

The Second World War made a sudden ending to Pollock's life and public service in Hong Kong. Although he paid several visits to Hong Kong after the war, he and his wife settled permanently in Sydney after the outbreak of the Pacific War. Pollock died in Sydney on 2 February 1953, aged 88.

Family

Pollock married his wife, Pauline Oakley in Hong Kong in 1906 when he was 42. They had no children. Lady Oakley was a long-time resident in Hong Kong and was noted for her active participation in local public services, especially in the Street Sleepers' Society, St John's Cathedral Women's Guild and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Since the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, the refugee camps in Hong Kong had also become a chief interest to Lady Pollock. In 1940, Lady Pollock, Soong Ai-ling and others initiated a campaign in Hong Kong and Canton to set up cooperatives which could accommodate 6,000 refugees to restore production. Lady Pollock was subsequently appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the New Year Honours of 1941 for her eminent contribution.[4]

Bibliography

  • Bill of Lading Exceptions, London: Stevens and Sons, 1894.
  • Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea

Honours

  • J.P. (24 April 1891 [1])
  • Gold Medal for Plague Services (1894)
  • Q.C. (1900)
  • Kt. (King's birthday honour list 1924)

Honorary degrees

Place named after him

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ "No. 27205". The London Gazette. 26 June 1900. p. 3963.
  2. ^ "No. 32941". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 May 1924. p. 4407.
  3. ^ "No. 32959". The London Gazette. 25 July 1924. p. 5636.
  4. ^ "No. 35029". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 1940. p. 21.

References

English materials

  • Who Was Who, London: A & C Black, 1996.
  • Sir Frederick Pollock, , proved on 7 November 1870.
  • "OBITUARY", THE BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 17 May 1890.
  • Hong Kong Government Gazette, Hong Kong: Government Printer, 1940 – 1941.
  • Great Britain Colonial Office, Corona: The Journal of His Majesty's Colonial Service version 5, London: Secretary of State for the Colonies by H. M. Stationery Office, 1953.
  • Lai-bing Kan and Grace H. L. Chu, Constancy of Purpose, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 1988.
  • . Archived from the original on 27 October 2009. Retrieved 19 March 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), 8 December 2001.
  • "Honour for Mr. Pollock", The China Mail, Page 1, 3 June 1924.
  • "Sir H. E. Pollock, K.C., Honour for Long and Faithful Service", The China Mail, Page 5, 3 June 1924.
  • "Degree Congregation. Honours Bestowed by Hong Kong University", The China Mail, Page 7, 6 January 1925.
  • "The Hon. Sir Henry Pollock, Fractures Limb as Result of Fall", HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, Page 1, 18 September 1941.
  • "Eight Residents in Honours List", HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, Page 8, 2 January 1941.
  • Endacott, G. B., Government and people in Hong Kong, 1841–1962: A Constitutional History, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 1964.
  • Oliver Lindsay, The Battle for Hong Kong 1941–1945: Hostage to Fortune, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2005.

Chinese materials

  • 張蓮興, 香港二十八總督, 朝華出版社, 1997.
  • "普樂夫人等發起香港工合單位", 大公報, page 2, part 6, 13 April 1940.
  • "孔祥熙夫人普樂夫人等發起香港工合單位", 香港華字日報, page 3, part 2, 13 April 1940.
  • "非官議員普樂離職", 大公報, page 2, part 6, 22 September 1940.
  • "普樂返港", 大公報, page 2, part 6, 28 November 1940.
  • "港府昨正式發表行政局議員名單", 工商日報, page 4, 8 May 1946.

External links

  • Constancy of Purpose
Legal offices
Preceded by Acting
Attorney General of Hong Kong

1896–1901
Succeeded by
Preceded by Attorney General of Fiji
1902
Succeeded by
Preceded by Acting
Attorney General of Hong Kong

1919
Succeeded by
Preceded by Acting
Attorney General of Hong Kong

1925
Succeeded by
Preceded by Acting
Attorney General of Hong Kong

1928
Succeeded by
Legislative Council of Hong Kong
Preceded by Acting
Unofficial Member

Representative for Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce
1903–1904
Succeeded by
Preceded by Unofficial Member
Representative for Justices of the Peace
1906–1941
Japanese occupation of Hong Kong
Preceded by Senior Unofficial Member
1917–1941
Political offices
Preceded by Member of the Sanitary Board
1903–1906
Succeeded by
Preceded by Provisional Unofficial Member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong
1911
Succeeded by
Preceded by Provisional Unofficial Member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong
1912
Succeeded by
New seat Unofficial Member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong
1921–1941
Japanese occupation of Hong Kong
Preceded by Senior Unofficial Member of the Executive Council
1926–1941

henry, pollock, american, lawyer, politician, henry, pollock, henry, edward, pollock, chinese, 普樂, december, 1864, february, 1953, english, barrister, became, prominent, politician, hong, kong, acted, attorney, general, hong, kong, several, occasions, once, ap. For the American lawyer and politician see Henry W Pollock Sir Henry Edward Pollock QC JP Chinese 普樂 16 December 1864 2 February 1953 was an English barrister who became a prominent politician in Hong Kong He acted as Attorney General in Hong Kong on several occasions and was once appointed to the same post in Fiji He also served as Senior Unofficial Member of both the Legislative Council and Executive Council for many years in pre Pacific War Hong Kong Along with Sir Paul Chater then Governor Sir Frederick Lugard later Lord Lugard and others Sir Henry was one of the founders of the University of Hong Kong The HonourableSir Henry Edward Pollock普樂爵士QC JP9th Attorney General of FijiIn office 1901 1903MonarchEdward VIIGovernorSir William AllardyceSir Henry JacksonPreceded byJohn Symonds UdalSucceeded byAlbert EhrhardtActing Attorney General of Hong KongIn office 1896 1901MonarchVictoriaGovernorSir William RobinsonSir Wilsone Black Administrator Sir Henry BlakePreceded bySir W Meigh GoodmanSucceeded bySir W Meigh Goodman14th Senior Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council of Hong KongIn office 1917 1941MonarchsGeorge VEdward VIIIGeorge VIGovernorSir Francis MayClaud Severn Administrator Sir Reginald StubbsClaud Severn Administrator Sir Cecil ClementiThomas Southorn Administrator Sir William PeelThomas Southorn Administrator Sir Andrew CaldecottNorman Lockhart Smith Administrator Sir Geoffry NorthcoteNorman Lockhart Smith Administrator Mark Aitchison YoungPreceded byWei A YukSucceeded byD F Landale2nd Senior Unofficial Member of the Executive Council of Hong KongIn office 1926 1941MonarchsGeorge VEdward VIIIGeorge VIGovernorSir Cecil ClementiThomas Southorn Administrator Sir William PeelThomas Southorn Administrator Sir Andrew CaldecottNorman Lockhart Smith Administrator Sir Geoffry NorthcoteNorman Lockhart Smith Administrator Mark Aitchison YoungPreceded byCatchick Paul ChaterSucceeded byArthur MorseActing Attorney General of Hong KongIn office 1919 1919MonarchGeorge VGovernorClaud SevernPreceded byJoseph Horsford KempSucceeded byJoseph Horsford KempActing Attorney General of Hong KongIn office 1919 1919MonarchGeorge VGovernorClaud SevernPreceded byJoseph Horsford KempSucceeded byJoseph Horsford KempActing Attorney General of Hong KongIn office 1919 1919MonarchGeorge VGovernorClaud SevernPreceded byJoseph Horsford KempSucceeded byJoseph Horsford KempPersonal detailsBorn16 December 1864London EnglandDied2 February 1953 1953 02 02 aged 88 Sydney AustraliaSpousePauline OakleyProfessionBarrister Politician Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Family background 1 2 Early years 1 3 Colonial life 1 4 Life as councillor 1 5 Final years 2 Family 3 Bibliography 4 Honours 4 1 Honorary degrees 4 2 Place named after him 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 7 1 English materials 7 2 Chinese materials 8 External linksBiography EditFamily background Edit Sir Frederick Pollock grandfather of Sir Henry Pollock was born to a well known family in the law His grandfather Sir Frederick Pollock 1st Baronet served as Attorney General for England and Wales between 1834 and 1835 and 1841 and 1844 in the Tory administrations of Sir Robert Peel one of his many cousins Sir Frederick Pollock 3rd Baronet was a renowned professor of jurisprudence in the University of Oxford another cousin of Pollock Ernest Pollock 1st Viscount Hanworth served as the Master of the Rolls from 1925 to 1935 Pollock s father was Dr Arthur Julius Pollock 7 February 1835 11 May 1890 He was the eldest son in the second marriage of Sir Frederick Pollock though he ranked thirteenth among the twenty four children that Sir Frederick had Dr Pollock was a physician and lecturer in the Foundling Hospital and Charing Cross Hospital He was also a Council member of the Royal College of Physicians Pollock was the third child of his mother Ellen Bailey 25 October 1895 He had an elder sister Caroline 4 August 1862 an elder brother Arthur Julius 21 August 1863 28 May 1914 and a younger brother Charles Frederick 17 July 1866 17 July 1919 Early years Edit Pollock was born in London England on 16 December 1864 He spent his early childhood in London and was later admitted to the Charterhouse School He quit the school in 1882 at the age of 18 and was promptly employed by a bank in Drury Lane After one year of working Pollock earned 50 pounds in total and opted for continuing his study He was successfully enrolled by the Inner Temple in 1883 and was called to the bar upon graduation in 1887 In April 1888 seeking for new opportunities elsewhere Pollock left his family and departed England for the then Crown Colony of Hong Kong He was soon qualified as a barrister in Hong Kong and set up his career in the legal profession Colonial life Edit Pollock was substantially valued by the local society not long after his arrival to the colony For six months from September 1888 to March 1889 he had been appointed by the government as acting Police Magistrate In 1891 he was appointed unofficial Justice of Peace and later in 1892 he had served as acting Puisne Judge for the government for half a year In 1894 Hong Kong was suffered from a severe plague which caused thousands of deaths Pollock was noted for his work on relief during the plague and was awarded a gold medal by the government afterwards From 1896 to 1901 Pollock was appointed by the government as acting Attorney General and thus became an ex officio member of both the Legislative Council and Executive Council During his tenure as both an Attorney General and a councillor his performance was highly regarded by his colleagues and he was appointed Queen s Counsel as a reward in 1900 1 In 1902 Pollock was posted to Fiji and served as Attorney General in there Nevertheless he did not stay long in Fiji and returned to Hong Kong a year later A year in Fiji did not weaken his influence in Hong Kong he went on to serve as a member of the Sanitary Board from March 1903 to February 1906 Life as councillor Edit In 1903 under the promotion of the Chamber of Commerce Pollock had briefly served as acting Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council for around a year Soon afterwards he was again nominated by the unofficial Justices of Peace and became a full unofficial member of the council in December 1905 For nearly forty years Pollock would continuously represent the unofficial Justices of Peace constituency in the council In his long tenure in the Legislative Council Pollock was active in public service and served in a number of committees as member or chairman including the Peace Celebration and War Memorial Finance Committee Housing Commission and the Standing Law Committee During the First World War Pollock also sat as a Judge in the Appeal Tribunal he was later reappointed for the same post on the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 As early as 1911 and 1912 Pollock was provisionally appointed twice as unofficial member of the Executive Council However he lost the chance to be appointed a full unofficial member in November 1915 when he unsuccessfully pressured the then governor Sir Henry May in a Legislative Council meeting for replacing a vacancy for an unofficial member in the Executive Council through limited election Pollock was one of the most prominent activists on constitutional reform in pre war Hong Kong He did not give up after his request was abruptly turned down by Sir Henry In January 1916 he sent a petition compiled with a few hundreds signatures to the Secretary of State for the Colonies Bonar Law and called for reform in both the Legislative and Executive Council According to his proposal he suggested that more unofficial seats should be created on the two councils These new seats should be elected by members of the Chamber of Commerce and the unofficial Justices of Peace to let them be more fully represented Also Pollock supported the appointment of more Chinese to the two councils Pollock s proposal was also rejected by Bonar Law with no reason given The relationship between Pollock and Sir Henry was so badly damaged that Pollock was never again chosen to sit on the Executive Council during the governorship of Sir Henry Pollock only became an unofficial member of the Executive Council after the retirement of Sir Henry when his successor Sir Reginald Stubbs appointed him in 1921 Three years later Pollock was appointed a Knight Bachelor in the King s Birthday Honours in 1924 2 3 Pollock was appointed acting Attorney General for three times in 1919 1925 and 1928 respectively In his capacity as acting Attorney General he sat in the two councils as ex officio member rather than unofficial member and his unofficial seats in the Legislative Council was provisionally elected by his fellow Justices of Peace In 1917 he succeeded Sir Boshan Wei Yuk as Senior Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council later in 1926 he also became Senior Unofficial Member of the Executive Council after the death Sir Paul Chater and therefore became the Senior Member of both two councils Nevertheless on 16 September 1928 Pollock had an accidental fall in his home at No 367 the Peak He broke his thigh heavily and could not assume his duties in the councils As a result another member of the Legislative and the Executive Council Sir Shouson Chow temporarily replaced him as Senior Member during his incapacity Pollock recovered from the fall in December and reassumed his duties again Sir Henry was one of the founders of the University of Hong Kong He was later made a life member of the University Court Besides his duties in the two councils Pollock had served as chairman of the Hong Kong Branch of the Navy League the Chess Club the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the Constitutional Reform Association He had also served as Commodore of the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club Secretary of the Odd Volumes Society and corresponding secretary to the Royal Colonial Institute Pollock was instrumental to the establishment of the University of Hong Kong as he was one of the founders of the University Pollock was originally a member of the council of the Hong Kong College of Medicine for Chinese In March 1908 along with Sir Paul Chater Sir Kai Ho Kai and a few other people Pollock was appointed to the newly founded organising committee of the University of Hong Kong which was chaired by Sir Paul Chater by then governor Sir Frederick Lugard later Lord Lugard When the University of Hong Kong was officially founded in 1911 Pollock was appointed a life member of the University Court Pollock was said to be an active member who frequently attend the Court s meetings and was noted for his enthusiasm towards the development of the University In acknowledging his contribution he received Honorary Doctorates of Law from the University on 5 January 1925 Sir Henry left delivered a speech in the foundation stone laying ceremony of the new school site for St Stephen s College in Stanley on 27 April 1928 The ceremony was presided over by then governor Sir Cecil Clementi sitting in the front row Pollock had close ties with St Stephen s College as he was one of the guests invited to the foundation stone laying ceremony of the College s new school site in Stanley in 1928 Furthermore in 1933 under the assistance from him and Sir Robert Kotewall the student actors and student actresses of the College were allowed to play on the same stage in a fundraising drama event regardless the opposition from the conservative Chinese community Final years Edit On 17 January 1940 and in the beginning of 1941 Pollock was appointed unofficial member of the Legislative and the Executive Council respectively for a further period of four years and five years However in December 1941 the Pacific War broke out suddenly and Hong Kong fell into Imperial Japan s hands after a month of resistance Fortunately Pollock and his wife were in Australia for health reason at the outbreak of the war thus they were not in Hong Kong during the Japanese invasion and did not end up in Hong Kong as prisoners of war Although the colonial Legislative Council and Executive Council ceased to operate during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong Pollock was still nominally the Senior Member of the Legislative and Executive Council until the expiration of his terms in 1944 and on 8 March 1946 Pollock s final term as Senior Unofficial Member of the Executive Council traversed the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong and ended after the Liberation of Hong Kong in 1945 but in reality he never attended any meeting of the two councils after the fall of Hong Kong The Hong Kong Government later issued a notice in the Hong Kong Gazette in May 1946 thanking Pollock for his contribution to the colony The Second World War made a sudden ending to Pollock s life and public service in Hong Kong Although he paid several visits to Hong Kong after the war he and his wife settled permanently in Sydney after the outbreak of the Pacific War Pollock died in Sydney on 2 February 1953 aged 88 Family EditPollock married his wife Pauline Oakley in Hong Kong in 1906 when he was 42 They had no children Lady Oakley was a long time resident in Hong Kong and was noted for her active participation in local public services especially in the Street Sleepers Society St John s Cathedral Women s Guild and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Since the outbreak of the Second Sino Japanese War in 1937 the refugee camps in Hong Kong had also become a chief interest to Lady Pollock In 1940 Lady Pollock Soong Ai ling and others initiated a campaign in Hong Kong and Canton to set up cooperatives which could accommodate 6 000 refugees to restore production Lady Pollock was subsequently appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire OBE in the New Year Honours of 1941 for her eminent contribution 4 Bibliography EditBill of Lading Exceptions London Stevens and Sons 1894 Regulations for Preventing Collisions at SeaHonours EditJ P 24 April 1891 1 Gold Medal for Plague Services 1894 Q C 1900 Kt King s birthday honour list 1924 Honorary degrees Edit University of Hong Kong Hon LLD 5 January 1925 Place named after him Edit Pollock Path a cul de sac on the top of Mount Gough Hong Kong Island See also EditLegislative Council of Hong Kong Executive Council of Hong Kong Attorney General Hong Kong University of Hong KongFootnotes Edit No 27205 The London Gazette 26 June 1900 p 3963 No 32941 The London Gazette Supplement 30 May 1924 p 4407 No 32959 The London Gazette 25 July 1924 p 5636 No 35029 The London Gazette Supplement 31 December 1940 p 21 References EditEnglish materials Edit Who Was Who London A amp C Black 1996 Sir Frederick Pollock The Will of Sir Jonathan Frederick Pollock proved on 7 November 1870 OBITUARY THE BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL 17 May 1890 Hong Kong Government Gazette Hong Kong Government Printer 1940 1941 Great Britain Colonial Office Corona The Journal of His Majesty s Colonial Service version 5 London Secretary of State for the Colonies by H M Stationery Office 1953 Lai bing Kan and Grace H L Chu Constancy of Purpose Hong Kong Hong Kong University Press 1988 Descendants of Sir Frederick Pollock Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved 19 March 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 8 December 2001 Honour for Mr Pollock The China Mail Page 1 3 June 1924 Sir H E Pollock K C Honour for Long and Faithful Service The China Mail Page 5 3 June 1924 Degree Congregation Honours Bestowed by Hong Kong University The China Mail Page 7 6 January 1925 The Hon Sir Henry Pollock Fractures Limb as Result of Fall HONGKONG TELEGRAPH Page 1 18 September 1941 Eight Residents in Honours List HONGKONG TELEGRAPH Page 8 2 January 1941 Endacott G B Government and people in Hong Kong 1841 1962 A Constitutional History Hong Kong Hong Kong University Press 1964 Oliver Lindsay The Battle for Hong Kong 1941 1945 Hostage to Fortune Hong Kong Hong Kong University Press 2005 Chinese materials Edit 張蓮興 香港二十八總督 朝華出版社 1997 普樂夫人等發起香港工合單位 大公報 page 2 part 6 13 April 1940 孔祥熙夫人普樂夫人等發起香港工合單位 香港華字日報 page 3 part 2 13 April 1940 非官議員普樂離職 大公報 page 2 part 6 22 September 1940 普樂返港 大公報 page 2 part 6 28 November 1940 港府昨正式發表行政局議員名單 工商日報 page 4 8 May 1946 External links EditConstancy of PurposeLegal officesPreceded byWilliam Meigh Goodman Acting Attorney General of Hong Kong1896 1901 Succeeded byWilliam Meigh GoodmanPreceded byJohn Symonds Udal Attorney General of Fiji1902 Succeeded byAlbert EhrhardtPreceded byJoseph Horsford Kemp Acting Attorney General of Hong Kong1919 Succeeded byJoseph Horsford KempPreceded byJoseph Horsford Kemp Acting Attorney General of Hong Kong1925 Succeeded byJoseph Horsford KempPreceded byJoseph Horsford Kemp Acting Attorney General of Hong Kong1928 Succeeded byJoseph Horsford KempLegislative Council of Hong KongPreceded byRobert Gordon Shewan Acting Unofficial MemberRepresentative for Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce1903 1904 Succeeded byRobert Gordon ShewanPreceded byCatchick Paul Chater Unofficial MemberRepresentative for Justices of the Peace1906 1941 Japanese occupation of Hong KongPreceded byWei Yuk Senior Unofficial Member1917 1941Political officesPreceded byWilliam HartiganJames McKie Member of the Sanitary Board1903 1906 Succeeded byHenry HumphreysAugustus Shelton HooperPreceded byCatchick Paul Chater Provisional Unofficial Member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong1911 Succeeded byCatchick Paul ChaterPreceded byEdbert Ansgar Hewett Provisional Unofficial Member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong1912 Succeeded byEdbert Ansgar HewettNew seat Unofficial Member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong1921 1941 Japanese occupation of Hong KongPreceded byCatchick Paul Chater Senior Unofficial Member of the Executive Council1926 1941 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Pollock amp oldid 1125131168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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