(Frederick) George Binney was born on 23 September 1900 at Great Bookham, Surrey. He was educated at Eton and Merton College, Oxford, where he was invited to become organizing secretary of the Oxford University Spitsbergen Expedition (leader Francis Charles Robert Jourdain) in 1921. In 1923, he led the Merton College (Oxford) Arctic Expedition, organized to continue previous work in Spitsbergen and to make a reconnaissance of Nordaustlandet. Sailing in Terningen around the north coast of Spitsbergen, the expedition failed to circumnavigate Nordaustlandet. He returned to the Arctic the following year when he led the Oxford University Arctic expedition, organized to make a further attempt to survey Nordaustlandet. He decided to use a seaplane for the survey work, recording his experiences in his book With seaplane and sledge in the Arctic in 1925. He was awarded the gold medal of the Geographical Society of Paris and the Back award and Founder's gold medal of the Royal Geographical Society for his achievements.
In 1926, Binney joined the Hudson's Bay Company, recruiting and training apprentices to place on trading stations in northern Canada. He left the Hudson's Bay Company in 1931 to join the United Steel Companies Ltd., later becoming the company's export manager in 1933. During the Second World War, he was seconded for service with the Ministry of Supply, skillfully leading a fleet carrying war supplies through the German blockade of Swedish ports to a rendezvous with the Royal Navy off the Norwegian coast. He was knighted in 1941 and appointed to the DSO in 1944 for his war service. After the war, Binney returned to United Steel Companies Ltd. as export director, leaving briefly to lead the United Kingdom Trade and Industrial Mission to Ghana in 1959. Retiring in 1966, he died on 27 September 1972 at St. Lawrence in Jersey.
Published works The Eskimo book of knowledge... by George Binney, W W Perrett and Samuel King Hutton, Hudson's Bay Company London (1931) SPRI Library Shelf 809.475:82
From the guide to the George Binney collection, 1924, (Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge)