George Pereira


George Edward Pereira, was a British Army officer, writer, diplomatist, and explorer in Central Asia, Tibet and Western China.

Early life and family

George Pereira was descended from an old Roman Catholic family of Portuguese origins, which had profited in the 19th century from the Chinese trade, notably in Macao. He was eldest of the three sons of Edward Pereira by the Hon. Margaret Anne Stonor, eighth daughter of Thomas Stonor, 3rd Baron Camoys of Stonor Park, Oxfordshire. He was educated at The Oratory School in Edgbaston, where his younger brother Edward Pereira was later principal and benefactor. A third brother was Major General Sir Cecil Pereira, a distinguished commander in the Second Boer War and the First World War.

Soldier

George Pereira was commissioned into the Grenadier Guards as a lieutenant on 23 August 1884, and was promoted to captain on 4 November 1896. Promoted to major on 2 May 1900, he served in China with the 1st Chinese Regiment, where he received the Distinguished Service Order for his services during the Boxer Rebellion. In April 1902 he was in charge of bringing to South Africa a reinforcement of 500 officers and men of the Grenadier Guards for the 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the regiment, serving there during the Second Boer War. The war ended shortly after their arrival, in June 1902, and he returned home with other men of the 2nd battalion on the SS Galeka in October 1902.
During the First World War, he served on the Western Front as officer commanding the 47th Brigade and then the 43rd Brigade. He was one of the great characters of the 16th Division. Known to the men as 'Hoppy' because of lameness after a riding accident, he was an irascible fire-eater and firm disciplinarian; characteristics he combined with an obvious concern for the welfare of his men. "Every officer and soldier of his brigade swears by him", one of his battalion commanders wrote.

Explorer

Pereira had served as British Military attaché in Peking from 1905 to 1910 and was fluent in Chinese. He made many adventurous journeys in China and Tibet, frequently travelling thousands of miles on foot. He was the first European to walk from Peking to Lhasa, when he described the Amne Machin massif in eastern Tibet in 1921-2, sometimes reckoned among the great geographical discoveries of the twentieth century.
His journey from Yunnan along the Tibetan border in 1923 was his last, as he died of some internal trouble just before reaching Kantze, near Batang, Sichuan, in October 1923.
His journals of Chinese exploration were edited shortly after his death. Further extracts from his journals have been published recently in the Guards' Magazine, edited by his great nephew, Edward Pereira.