Beaufort Burdekin
Beaufort Burdekin (27 December 1891 – 15 May 1963) was a British rower who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics.[1]
Olympic medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's rowing | ||
1912 Stockholm | Men's eight |
Burdekin was born in Dorset but came from an Australian family after whom the Burdekin River was named.[2] He was educated at Cheltenham College[3] and at New College, Oxford. He was a crew member of the New College eight which won the silver medal for Great Britain rowing at the 1912 Summer Olympics.[4] In 1914 he was a member of the Oxford Boat in the Boat Race.
Burdekin became a member of Inner Temple. He served in the Royal Field Artillery during World War I and was wounded in action in France.[5][6] In 1920 he went with his family to Sydney, Australia where he was a barrister.
Burdekin married the feminist novelist Katharine Penelope Cade in 1915. They had two daughters, Katharine Jayne (b. 1917) and Helen Eugenie (b. 1920). The marriage ended in 1922.[7]
References
- "Beaufort Burdekin". Olympedia. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
- State Library New South Wales – Manuscripts, oral history and pictures catalogue
- Katherine Burdekin Proud Man Afterword
- Sports Reference Olympic Sports – Beaufort Burdekin
- Charles John Darling Inner Templars who volunteered and served in the great war (1916)
- Cunneen, Tony (2015). "'Trouble does not exist': The New South Wales Bar and the Red Cross Missing and Wounded Enquiry Bureau". Bar News: 77.
- Desforges, Kate (January 2015). Burdekin's Utopian Visions: A Study of Four Interwar Texts (PhD thesis). University of Hull. pp. 6–7.