Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Michael David Irving Gass

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Monarch
  
Elizabeth II

Preceded by
  
Robert Sidney Foster

Monarch
  
Elizabeth II

Name
  
Michael Irving


Preceded by
  
Robert Sidney Foster

Succeeded by
  
Hugh Norman-Walker

Monarch
  
Elizabeth II

Battles and wars
  
World War II

Michael David Irving Gass

Preceded by
  
Edmund Brinsley Teesdale

Died
  
February 27, 1983, Somerset, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Elizabeth, Lady Gass (1975)

Alma mater
  
Queens' College, Cambridge

Service/branch
  
Royal West African Frontier Force

Sir Michael David Irving Gass, (Chinese: 祈濟時; 1916–1983) was the penultimate High Commissioner of the Western Pacific and also in his junior days Colonial Secretary of Hong Kong from 1965 - 1969, and the acting-Governor of Hong Kong during the riots in 1967.

Contents

Michael David Irving Gass Vintage Photo Of British Diploamt Sir Michael David Irving Gass

Education and war years

Gass was educated at King's School, Bruton, and then later obtained degrees at both Queens' College, Cambridge and Oxford University. After university he entered the Colonial Administration Service. His first appointment was to the Gold Coast in 1939. During World War II Gass entered the Army and achieved the rank of Major, he served in East Africa and Burma with the Gold Coast Regiment of the Royal West African Frontier Force (1939-1945); he was twice mentioned in despatches.

Career

After the war he returned to the Service, spending three years in Ashanti and two in Ghana before being posted in 1958 to the West Pacific High Commission as Chief Secretary.

From then until his retirement in 1973 he remained in the Far East, notably in Hong Kong where he was Colonial Secretary and Acting Governor intermittently between 1965-1969. In the colonial secretary's tenure, he and Ronald Holmes and Jack Cater and other government officials had to deal with riots in 1967 against British colonial rule. During the disorder, Governor Sir David Trench happened to be absent from Hong Kong and all of a sudden there was no one fully in command of the government. As a result, Gass became acting-Governor, and therefore it was Holmes and Gass who were in charge in the crisis. During the riots, he took a tough stance against the activists, in order to effectively control the situation, but has also become one of the main targets of attack leftist camp vocal opposition.

He became High Commissioner for the Western Pacific in 1969.

When he returned to England, Gass served as a Member of Somerset County Council (1977-1981).

Personal life

He became a Knight Commander of Order of St Michael and St George in the 1969 New Year Honours List.

He married Elizabeth Periam Fuller Acland Hood in 1975. They had no children.

References

Michael David Irving Gass Wikipedia