In 1898, he sat for an Eastern cadetship and the same year he went to Hong Kong as a cadet in Hong Kong Service of the Colonial Office, having scored the highest marks in the competitive examinations.[2]
He was appointed a King's Counsel in 1918.[4] He was made a CBE, in the same year.[5] Kemp was knighted in 1927.[6]
In 1930, he was appointed Chief Justice of Hong Kong replacing Sir Henry Gollan. The appointment was in line with long-term practice in British Hong Kong of assigning administrative officers to serve in the local judiciary.[7]
^Chan, Ming K. (1997). "The Imperfect Legacy: Defects in the British Legal System in Colonial Hong Kong". University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law. 18 (1): 138–139. ISSN1086-7872.
^see, for example, Shanghai Evening Post, 11 March 1933 where he sat with Sir Peter Grain and Mr (later Sir) Allan Mossop.