in 1938 Edgar Anstey was born in
Mumbai in India in 1917 where his father
Percy Anstey (1876–1920), a former actor turned
economist, was Principal of the
Sydenham College of Commerce and Economics and Professor of Economic Theory and History. His mother was
Vera Anstey née Powell (1889–1976), also an economist and authority on the economy of India. In 1920 Anstey's father and younger brother died in
Delhi of
cholera necessitating Vera Anstey to return to Britain with her two surviving children. Left with few resources after the death of her husband, Vera Anstey needed to find work to support herself and her children and began a distinguished career as a lecturer at the
London School of Economics, while Edgar was brought up by two of his mother's sisters in
Reigate in
Surrey. Academically able, he obtained a scholarship to
Winchester College and later another to
King's College, Cambridge where he obtained a double first degree in Mathematics and Psychology in 1938. On graduating he spent a year as a ministerial
Private Secretary in the
Civil Service before being called up in 1939 at the start of
World War II. Commissioned as a second lieutenant in the
Dorset Regiment he had 18 months of active service in defending the Yorkshire coast from possible enemy invasion and was promoted to Major. He married Zoë Lilian Robertson (1913–2000) in 1939 and with her had a son, David Anstey. From 1941 to 1945 Anstey was at the
War Office where his skills as a psychologist were put to use improving the selection tests used for army recruits. ==Civil service==