Pawsey was born in
Surbiton,
Surrey, the second son of Charles James Pawsey and Ellen Edith Pawsey. His father was Paymaster In Chief of the Royal Navy. He was educated at
Berkhamsted School and
Wadham College, Oxford, where he graduated with a BA. He was commissioned into the
Worcestershire Regiment in 1914 and won the
Military Cross as a
second lieutenant (temporary
Lieutenant) in 1916
and bar as a
second lieutenant (temporary
captain) the next year. He was promoted
captain in 1917 and relinquished his
Territorial Army commission on 30 September 1921. Pawsey joined the
Indian Civil Service in 1919. He was appointed Assistant Commissioner in Assam in 1919, becoming Director of Land Records in 1932. He was made a Deputy Commissioner in 1935 and was District Commissioner,
Naga Hills during the
Burma campaigns of 1942 to 1944. Pawsey's bungalow and tennis court were the place where the
British Fourteenth Army finally turned the tide of the war against the Japanese during the
Burma Campaign of
World War II at the
Battle of Kohima. The part of this battle centred on his bungalow was known as the
Battle of the Tennis Court. Showing great bravery and loyalty to the local Naga people, Pawsey refused to leave Kohima during the siege by the Japanese that lasted from 5th to 20th April 1944, and did what he could to bolster morale and support Colonel Richards the garrison commander. The Nagas remained completely loyal to him and by way of thanks their tribal leaders were introduced to
Lord Mountbatten at
Kohima in August 1944. Prior to his return to Britain following India's independence, Pawsey wrote in the
Naga Nation, underlining that autonomy within the Indian Union was the more prudent course to follow. For, "Independence will mean: tribal warfare, no hospitals, no schools, no salt, no trade with the plains and general unhappiness". He was knighted on 14 August 1947, (part of the
1948 New Year Honours) and he retired 1948. In his later years, he lived at The Priory,
Badingham, Woodbridge, Suffolk, until his death on 21 July 1972. ==Family==