Hogg started to assist the Gung Ho movementoperated by New Zealand-born communist Rewi Alley in Shaanxi. He helped Alley operate a lice-infested facility for 60 orphaned boys. He converted a nearby cottage into a dormitory. With credit established in town, he was able to supply millet and vegetables to the children. Funds for the facility came from the Chinese Industrial Cooperatives, also organised by Alley. CIC regional headquarters in Baoji was over the Qinling Mountain pass. Hogg occasionally traveled by bicycle to CIC. The boys called him Ho Ke. To get respect and control over the boys, Hogg participated in many activities with them, including singing, swimming, sports and hiking. The children tended a vegetable garden for food and Hogg made a basketball court for recreation. He personally adopted four boys. In late 1944, the Nationalist army searched classrooms for boys to recruit. The army arrested Hogg for resisting recruitment.
Relocation
Hogg then decided to relocate the boys to Shandan in Gansu Province away. The first 33 left in November 1944, and the remaining 27 boys followed in January 1945. They travelled heavily snow-covered mountain roads by foot. After a month of walking,, they arrived in Lanzhou. Hogg hired six diesel trucks to complete the trip. In early March 1945, Hogg and his boys arrived in Shandan. Alley rented some old temples, turned them into classrooms and workshops, and appointed Hogg as headmaster. From the beginning, the school was aided by a group of friendly New Zealanders who later formed the New Zealand China Friendship Society.
Death
In July 1945, Hogg stubbed his toe while playing basketball with the boys. It became infected with tetanus and two boys went to Lanzhou by motorcycle, a 500-mile round trip to get medicine. To comfort Hogg until he died, the boys sang nursery rhymes he had taught them. He died on 22 July after three days. He was laid to rest outside town. His headstone is engraved with lines from his favourite poem. He never saw the end of the Sino-Japanese War with the surrender of Japan just one month after his death.
Hogg's life is dramatised in the film The Children of Huang Shi, also called Children of the Silk Road or Escape from Huang Shi, starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers as Hogg and Chow Yun-fat as a Chinese communistresistance fighter Chen Hansheng. Director James Macmanus has emphasised that the events in the film are fictionalised, with some events, such as his entry into Nanjing being constructed for dramatic effect. His life is chronicled in Ocean Devil: The Life and Legend of George Hogg by James MacManus. His own account is George Aylwin Hogg, I See a New China, which includes his participation in the Chinese Industrial Cooperatives project in rural industrialization.
Books
Blades of Grass - The Story of George Aylwin Hogg by Mark Aylwin Thomas,
I See a New China by George Hogg,
Ocean Devil: The Life and Legend of George Hogg by James MacManus,
Fruition: The story of George Alwin Hogg by Rewi Alley,