In 1925, Hope Simpson was knighted. Following his parliamentary defeat he assumed a number of posts for various organisations, including the
League of Nations, as an expert on the question of
refugees. He was posted first to
Greece to monitor the 1923
population exchange between Greece and Turkey. Following the widespread
1929 Palestine riots he was sent to
British Mandate Palestine on a fact finding mission, which resulted in the
Hope Simpson Report in 1930. During the
1931 China floods the League of Nations sent Hope Simpson to China, where he became director-general of the National Flood Relief Commission for the government of the
Republic of China. As well as coordinating refugee relief, he became a strong critic of the Japanese aerial bombing of a flood refugee camp in Shanghai, following the
January 28 Incident. he had given to John Osborn Williams, the owner of the Labrador Development Company Limited, who set up a loggers' camp in Alexis Bay for cutting and exporting pitwood to
Cardiff for the collieries of
South Wales. Hope Simpson also established the
Newfoundland Ranger Force a welfare and police force meant to link the people of Newfoundland and Labrador with The
Commission of Government in St. John's. In 1937 Sir John received the Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire medal not so very long after his return from
Newfoundland. In 1938 and 1939 he produced reports for
Chatham House on Europe's refugee problem. He continued to be involved in the Jewish/Palestine Question after World War II. He contributed to the Report to General-Assembly, in 1947, for the
United Nations Special Committee on Palestine. Sir John Hope Simpson died on 10 April 1961. He left £29,764 16s to an unknown heir. ==See also==