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Francis Henry May

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Monarch
  
Edward VII George V

Monarch
  
Edward VII

Preceded by
  
Sir James Lockhart

Preceded by
  
Sir Matthew Nathan


Monarch
  
Edward VII

Name
  
Francis May

Preceded by
  
Sir Henry Blake

Francis Henry May httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons55

Died
  
February 6, 1922, Suffolk, United Kingdom

Education
  
Harrow School, Trinity College, Dublin

Succeeded by
  
Warren Delabere Barnes

Sir Francis Henry May (Chinese Translated Name: 梅含理) (14 March 1860 – 6 February 1922) was a British colonial administrator who was Governor of Fiji from 1911 to 1912, and Governor of Hong Kong from 1912 to 1918.

Contents

Early life and education

May was born in Dublin, Ireland on 14 March 1860. He was the 4th son of Rt. Hon. George Augustus Chichester May, Lord Chief-Justice of Ireland. May was educated at Harrow School and Trinity College, Dublin, where a few of his predecessors to the Governorship of Hong Kong attended school. May received the 1st Honourman and Prizeman Classics and Modern Languages and B.A. in 1881.

Career

In 1881, May was appointed to a Hong Kong Cadetship after a competitive examination. In 1886, he became the Assistant Protector of Chinese and private secretary to Governor Sir William Des Vœux. He was also the private secretary to Acting Administrator Digby Barker from 1889 to 1891.

May would hold the office of Assistant Colonial Secretary in 1891 and Acting Colonial Treasurer in 1892. He was made a member of the Legislative Council in 1895.

From 1893 to 1901, May was the Captain Superintendent of the Hong Kong Police Force, and Superintendent of Victoria Gaol and Fire Brigade between 1896 and 1902.

He was appointed to the position of Colonial Secretary for Hong Kong in April 1902, serving until 21 January 1911, and as such was appointed acting administrator of Hong Kong in 1903, 1904, 1906, 1907, and 1910. In 1911, May was appointed Governor of Fiji and High Commissioner Western Pacific, a position he would hold until 1912.

Governor of Hong Kong

In 1912, May was appointed Governor of Hong Kong, a position he occupied in his own right until 1918. It was also his last post in the Colonial Service.

May was the only Hong Kong Governor to be the target of an assassination attempt. He was fired upon near the General Post Office as he rode in a sedan chair after arriving from Fiji in July 1912. May was not injured; the bullet lodged in the sedan of his wife. The gunman, Li Hung Hung, had a grudge against May. Several years before, this former Police Superintendent had imprisoned Li's father, an undesirable mainland immigrant. May used a car for daily transport from then onwards.

On 22 January 1918, May personally negotiated with the remaining member of a gang holed up in the "Siege of Gresson Street", following a running gun battle through the streets of Wanchai in which five police officers were killed.

In 1919, May was allowed to retire, due to ill health.

Personal

May married Helena Barker in 1891. She was the daughter of Acting Administrator Major-General Digby Barker. They had four daughters, Stella, Phoebe, Dionne and Iris. Stella married General Philip de Fonblanque.

He died at Clare Priory, Suffolk, England. He is buried at Clare.

Honours

  • K.St.J.
  • J.P. for Suffolk
  • C.M.G., 1895
  • G.C.M.G., 1919
  • Publications

  • Guide to Cantonese Colloquial
  • Yachting In Hong-Kong
  • Places named after him

    May Road, a roadway in the Upper Mid-Levels area in Hong Kong Island, and May Hall of the University of Hong Kong were named after him. Also, the Helena May Foundation was named after his wife.

    References

    Francis Henry May Wikipedia