Victor Purcell

Victor William Williams Saunders Purcell CMG (26 January 1896 – 2 January 1965) was a British colonial public servant, historian, poet, and Sinologist in Malaya (now Malaysia).

After the First World War, Purcell pursued his undergraduate studies at Trinity College, Cambridge, studying history.

During his service in Malaya he dealt in particular with the role of the local minority Chinese and published significant works on this subject.

In 1926 he spent seven months as District Officer on Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean, with wide-ranging but largely undemanding responsibilities in that remote mining community (Magistrate, Assistant District Judge, Port Officer, Port Health Officer, Postal Agent, Assistant Protector of the Chinese, and other responsibilities).

From 1949 he lectured in Far Eastern History at Cambridge University and gained the degrees of Doctor of Philosophy and Litt.D (Cantab.) During this period he published "the Sweeniad" under the pseudonym Myra Buttle (Secker & Warburg 1958) a defence against the influence of T S Eliot.

In 1978 he was honoured by a postage stamp of Christmas Island.

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