Beaufort Burdekin

Beaufort Burdekin (27 December 1891 – 15 May 1963) was a British rower who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics.

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.[1] He was educated at Cheltenham College[2] 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.[3] 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.[4][5] 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.[6]

See also

References

  1. State Library New South Wales – Manuscripts, oral history and pictures catalogue
  2. Katherine Burdekin Proud Man Afterword
  3. Sports Reference Olympic Sports – Beaufort Burdekin
  4. Charles John Darling Inner Templars who volunteered and served in the great war (1916)
  5. Cunneen, Tony (2015). "'Trouble does not exist': The New South Wales Bar and the Red Cross Missing and Wounded Enquiry Bureau". Bar News: 77.
  6. Desforges, Kate (January 2015). Burdekin’s Utopian Visions: A Study of Four Interwar Texts (PhD thesis). University of Hull. pp. 6–7.


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