Born in Edinburgh and educated at
George Watson's College and the
University of Edinburgh, he would spend three decades overseas and return to Britain in the 1960s. Sir Robert Brown Black served in the administration of Britain's colonies for more than 30 years. Entering the colonial service, Black was assigned to
Trinidad, but the remainder of his postings were in Asia. During his posting in
North Borneo, Black was commissioned into the
Intelligence Corps and involved in guerilla resistance against the Japanese. He was captured in 1942 and spent the remainder of
World War II in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp. After the war ended, he returned to the colonial service and served in
North Borneo and
Hong Kong before moving on to
Singapore as Governor (1955–57). Subsequently, he became Governor of Hong Kong from 1958 to 1964.
Governor of Hong Kong During his governorship, Hong Kong became increasingly prosperous. At the same time, many tens of thousands of refugees were illegally crossing the border from
China every year, driven in part by widespread
famine in China during the years 1958–1961. Some were stopped and sent back, but almost all of the hundreds of thousands who reached
Kowloon were allowed to stay. This influx placed an enormous burden on the colonial authorities, but the needs of the refugees were met by a programme of
public housing construction and
public health measures. Robert Black had been dealing with leftists in a heavy-handed way. On 18 April 1958, a raid was conducted on the library of the
Pui Kiu Middle School (PKMS). The officer-in-charge of the Hong Kong Island Section of the Inspectorate of Education visited the school with five assistants. Nineteen books were confiscated and four were used as evidence of the 'mismanagement of the school' in a warning letter addressed to the school supervisor on 13 May. On the basis of these and other accusations, such as hiring of unregistered teachers and discussion of political issues in school meetings, To Pak-fui (杜伯奎), the principal of PKMS, was deported on 6 August, to Lo Wu. Hong Kong experienced a prolonged
drought of unanticipated severity during the last two years of his tenure, which led to a serious water shortage. Water rationing was imposed in May 1962 and continued through August 1964. From June 1963 until late May 1964 (when the arrival of
Typhoon Viola ended the drought) the water supply was restricted to a single four-hour period every four days. Black helped establish the
Chinese University of Hong Kong by uniting several smaller institutions. He served as Chancellor of both the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the
University of Hong Kong during his tenure as Governor of Hong Kong. He was knighted (KCMG) in 1955 and promoted to
GCMG in 1962. ==Post-governorship==