Sir William Robert Burkitt (1838 – 16 June 1908) was an Irish judge in British India in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Education
From the Irish branch of a prominent family of judges, theologians, and doctors, Burkitt was born in Dublin. He was educated at Trinity College Dublin and called to the bar at Middle Temple.
He took the Indian Civil Service exams in 1860 and graduated to the Bengal Civil Service in 1869.
He served as a High Court Judge in Allahabad (1895-1908)[3][4] and was appointed Chief Justice of the United Provinces and as Puisne Judge (1895), the most senior category of judges in British India.[5][6]
An account of this highly unusual event was written at the time by Sir Henry McMahon.[13][14][15][16][17] It was performed in an unusual style, the Emir taking all three ordinary degrees of masonry at once - a rare event rumoured to signify membership of the Roshaniya.[18]
Personal life
Burkitt was married twice. He married first to Kathleen Dwyer (who was lost at sea) and then to Frances Gill. He had children with both wives. His son, William, also a judge, was tipped to follow in his father's footsteps but died young from pneumonia on 19 May 1918 in Nainital.[citation needed] There were several daughters, including Ethel Lilian Burkitt, who married in December 1902 Captain Charles Hampden Turner, Suffolk Regiment.[19]
Later life
He died in at Norris's Hotel, 48-53 Russell Road, Kensington, London[20] on 16 June 1908.