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Name: HOGAN, Michael Joseph CMG, Sir

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Birth Date: 15 Mar 1908 Dublin

Death Date: 27 Sep 1986 Ascot

Nationality: Irish

First Date: 1933

Profession: Advocate, QC

Area: Nairobi

Married: In Aden 9 Nov 1946 Patricia Galliford b. 5 Nov 1916 Guisborough, d. 25 Apr 1995 London

Book Reference: Irish

School: Belvedere Coll. Dublin, Stonyhurst, Trinity Coll. Dublin

General Information:

Gazette - Voters List 1936 - Michael Joseph Hogan, Advocate, Muthaiga
On committee of the Irish Society in 1933
Wikipedia He was admitted as a solicitor in Dublin in 1930 and practised with Maxwell and Weldon of Dublin for less than a year. He then moved to NairobiKenya, where he practised for five years with the firm of Daly & Figgis.In 1936, he qualified as a barrister at law at the Irish Bar (King's Inns). He was appointed ief Magistrate in Palestine and was based in Haifa and then Jerusalem in 1937. Soon after, he was appointed Crown Counsel in Palestine. At the end of World War II, in 1945, he was appointed Attorney General in Aden. He was appointed a King's Counsel while in Aden. At the end of 1946, he returned to Jerusalem as Solicitor General and stayed in that position until the termination of the Mandate of Palestine in May 1948. He remained in Palestine to advise the British forces there until they were withdrawn in July 1948. He then acted as a legal adviser to the Foreign Office in London. He was appointed Solicitor General of the Federation of Malaya in August 1950 and in December that year was promoted to Attorney General. He briefly acted as Administrator of Malaya when Sir Henry GurneyHigh Commissioner for Malaya, was assassinated by Malayan bandits near Fraser's Hill. Hogan was made a Queen's Counsel in 1952. He was awarded a CMG in 1953. He was appointed Chief Justice of Hong Kong in 1955. From 1964, he concurrently held the post of Chief Justice of Brunei. He was appointed as joint commissioner to the Commission of inquiry into the Hong Kong Disturbances in 1966 (Hong Kong 1966 riots). Hogan enlisted as a private in the Kenya Defence Force in 1930 and retired with the rank of captain in 1936. He also served in the Palestine Volunteer Defence Force, Jerusalem from 1940 until it was disbanded in August 1943. Hogan retired to England at the end of 1969 and was seen off at Queen's Pier on 31 December 1969. His ship sailed from Hong Kong the following morning. His appointment as Chief Justice of Brunei ceased on 13 January 1970. He sat as a member of a number of Courts of Appeal of small members of the British Commonwealth after retirement, including the Court of Appeal of the Bahamas (1975 to 1978) and the Seychelles Court of Appeal.
 

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