Maurice Murray Watson

M. M. Watson
Unofficial Member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong
In office
24 October 1946  18 March 1953
Appointed by Mark Young
Alexander Grantham
Preceded by New seat
Succeeded by Dhun J. Ruttonjee
Personal details
Occupation Solicitor
Businessman

Maurice Murray Watson was a British solicitor in Hong Kong and unofficial member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong.

Biography

Watson worked as an articled clerk from November 1910 to A. Home, of 55 Gracechurch Street, London and served in his office for four years. When the First World War broke out, he joined as private of the Inns of Court Officers' Training Corps on 8 November 1914 and later became the 2nd Lieutenant of the 11th Battalion of the South Staffordshire Regiment. After he was demobilised in 1919, he was admitted a solicitor in England in 1919 when he complied all the requirements but had not given four months' notice to the Registrar of the Law Society. The Law Society wrote to say they did not object to the application.[1]

Watson later moved to Hong Kong to practice as a solicitor of the Criminal Sessions Court by the acting Chief Justice H. H. J. Gompertz on 27 January 1921. He worked for the firm Johnson, Stokes and Master. He was also head of many public companies, such as the chairman of the Thomson & Co. Chartered Accountants, director of the Broadcast Relay Service (Hong Kong) Limited and the co-founder of the Swire Pacific Limited when it was incorporated in 1940. He also held many public offices such as secretary of the Dental Board and member of the Medical Board. He was also member of the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce.

In 1946, Watson was elected as the representative of the Unofficial Justices of the Peace to the Legislative Council of Hong Kong. During his office as an unofficial member of the Legislative Council, he voted for the Inland Revenue Bill 1947 which was heavily being criticised by the unofficials who opposed to income tax.[2] He also agreed on the Governor Alexander Grantham's modification on the Young Plan which abandoned the possibility of a municipal council but introducing elections into the Legislative Council, arguing that a municipal council should emerge by evolution.[3]

He resigned and succeeded by Dhun J. Ruttonjee on 20 March 1953.

References

  1. "NEW SOLICITOR ENROLLED.". The Hong Kong Telegraph. 27 January 1921. p. 7.
  2. Littlewood, Michael (2010). Taxation Without Representation: The History of Hong Kong's Troublingly Successful Tax System. Hong Kong University Press. p. 103.
  3. Madden, Frederick, ed. (2000). The End of Empire: Dependencies Since 1948, Part 1: The West Indies, British Honduras, Hong Kong, Fiji, Cyprus, Gibraltar, and the Falklands, Volume 1. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 329.
Legislative Council of Hong Kong
Preceded by
H. E. Pollock
Unofficial Member
Representative for Justices of the Peace
1946–1953
Succeeded by
Dhun J. Ruttonjee
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