In 1921, he joined the Malayan Colonial Service as a Cadet in the Straits Settlements.[5] He served in various posts including Collector of Land Revenues and assistant District Judge, Malacca (1922);[6] assistant British Adviser, Kedah (1925–26);[7] District Officer, Raub (1926);[8] assistant to Colonial Secretary, Straits Settlements (1932);[9] Clerk of Councils, Straits Settlements (1932–1934);[10] Municipal Commissioner, Registrar of Deeds and Assistant Treasurer, Malacca (1935);[11] Resident Councillor, Malacca (1937);[12] and British Adviser, Perlis (1939–1941).[3][13]
During the Second World War, he was evacuated from Singapore on 13 February 1942 on HMS Grasshopper which was attacked and sunk by Japanese aircraft in the Bangka Strait while on its way to Sumatra. He later reached Ceylon and spent the remainder of the war in the Cocos Islands and India.[4]
In 1945, he returned to Malaya with the rank of colonel on the British Army General List, and served as Adviser, Perlis and Resident Commissioner, Kedah (1946);[14] President of Malacca Municipal Commission (1946);[15] and Resident Commissioner, Malacca (1946–47). He played a leading role in the rehabilitation of Malaya after the Second World War, and personally guided and directed military and police operations in Kedah and Perlis. He served as British Adviser, Kedah, Federation of Malaya (1950–51). He retired from the Malay Civil Service in 1951, and went to Singapore and served in the Singapore government as Supervisor and Chairman of Rural Areas, and remained in the post from 1952–1954.[4][3][16][17]
Personal life and death
Day married Dorothy Norman in 1939 and they had two daughters. He died on 23 June 1968, aged 72.[3]