Papers of Sir Percy Cradock

This material is held atSt John's College Library Special Collections, University of Cambridge

Scope and Content

The collection includes photographs, audio-visual media, memorabilia, certificates, press-cuttings, correspondence and reviews relating to Cradock's books, a small quantity of papers relating to Cradock's professional activities, and some personal correspondence.

Administrative / Biographical History

Percy Cradock was born in county Durham in 1923, the son of a colliery cashier, and was educated at Alderman Wraith Grammar School, Spennymoor. After serving in the RAF during the Second World War, in 1946 he came to St John's College, Cambridge to read law. He was elected president of the Cambridge Union in 1950, and published a history of the Union Society in 1953. After obtaining his LLM he remained in Cambridge as a supervisor in law and was called to the Middle Temple in 1953. He entered the Foreign Office in 1954, serving in Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong, and Beijing. He was present in Beijing in 1967 when the British Embassy was stormed by red guards and some embassy staff were assaulted and held under house arrest. He served as under-secretary in the Cabinet Office 1971-75 and as ambassador to the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) 1976-78. In 1978 Cradock returned to Beijing as British Ambassador, and in 1982 became leader of the British team in the formal negotiations on the future of Hong Kong (due to revert to China in 1997 under the terms of a 99-year lease signed in 1898). He returned to London in 1984 to supervise the Hong Kong negotiations and became Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's foreign policy advisor. He also served as chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee from 1985 to 1992.
In retirement, Cradock wrote three books. 'Experiences of China' (1994) was a memoir of his time there; 'In pursuit of British interests' (1997) discussed the issues he dealt with whilst at Downing Street; 'Know your enemy' (2002) was a history of the Joint Intelligence Committee.
He was appointed CMG in 1968, was knighted KCMG in 1980, and was promoted GCMG in 1983. He was an Honorary Fellow of St John's College from 1982 until his death in 2010.

Access Information

Open for consultation

Acquisition Information

Given to the Library November 2016, following the death of Cradock's widow.

Note

Percy Cradock was born in county Durham in 1923, the son of a colliery cashier, and was educated at Alderman Wraith Grammar School, Spennymoor. After serving in the RAF during the Second World War, in 1946 he came to St John's College, Cambridge to read law. He was elected president of the Cambridge Union in 1950, and published a history of the Union Society in 1953. After obtaining his LLM he remained in Cambridge as a supervisor in law and was called to the Middle Temple in 1953. He entered the Foreign Office in 1954, serving in Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong, and Beijing. He was present in Beijing in 1967 when the British Embassy was stormed by red guards and some embassy staff were assaulted and held under house arrest. He served as under-secretary in the Cabinet Office 1971-75 and as ambassador to the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) 1976-78. In 1978 Cradock returned to Beijing as British Ambassador, and in 1982 became leader of the British team in the formal negotiations on the future of Hong Kong (due to revert to China in 1997 under the terms of a 99-year lease signed in 1898). He returned to London in 1984 to supervise the Hong Kong negotiations and became Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's foreign policy advisor. He also served as chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee from 1985 to 1992.
In retirement, Cradock wrote three books. 'Experiences of China' (1994) was a memoir of his time there; 'In pursuit of British interests' (1997) discussed the issues he dealt with whilst at Downing Street; 'Know your enemy' (2002) was a history of the Joint Intelligence Committee.
He was appointed CMG in 1968, was knighted KCMG in 1980, and was promoted GCMG in 1983. He was an Honorary Fellow of St John's College from 1982 until his death in 2010.

Preferred citation: St John's College Library, Papers of Sir Percy Cradock.

Archivist's Note

26 Jul 2017

Additional Information

Published