George Beer Endacott (28 February 1901 – September 1971) was a British-born
Hong Kong historian.
He was born in South
Devon in the West England as a son of railway worker. He was educated at Tavistock Grammar School and
Exeter University and became a teacher. In the 1930s, he attended
Balliol College, Oxford and read politics, philosophy and economics, returning to teaching until he entered the
Royal Navy in 1942.[1]
During the
Second World War he served mainly in the Mediterranean as an interpreter with the French forces. On leaving the Navy in 1946 he took up an appointment as lecturer in history at the
University of Hong Kong where he remained until his retirement in 1962.[1] As a historian and author he wrote a number of books including A History of Hong Kong, Fragrant Harbour (with A Hinton) and Government and the People. The manuscript of his last book, Hong Kong Eclipse, was almost finished at the time of his death. It was completed, at the request of the Hong Kong government, by Alan Birch, a senior member of the History Department at the University of Hong Kong who Endacott had asked to read the manuscript.
Bibliography
Endacott, George Beer and Dorothy E. She (1949). The Diocese of Victoria, Hong Kong. A Hundred Years of Church History, 1849–1949.