Sidney Gerald Burrard

Sir Sidney Gerald Burrard Bt., KCSI, FRS (12 August 1860 - 16 March 1943) was a British army officer who served as surveyor general for India and played a major role in the Great Trigonometrical Survey's work in the Himalayas and identified the source of errors resulting from the displacement of the plumbline by the mountains.

Burrard was born on the Isle of Wight in a family of eminence, his father being Lieut.-Colonel Sidney Burrard of the Grenadier Guards. Their home at The Mount had been built by his grandfather Rev. Sir George. Burrard went to school in Lymington ad then Uppingham from 1873 where he showed his mathematical talents. In 1874 he moved to Wellington College where again he excelled at mathematics which led his father to decide that he was suited for the Royal Engineers. He received Commission in the Royal Engineers on 6 April 1879 and trained at the School of Military Engineering at Chatham before sailing to India in 1882. He joined the Bengal Sappers and Miners at Roorkee and then joined the Zhob valley expedition in Baluchistan. In 1884 he joined the Survey of India after a contemporary W.H. Pollen, who was posted as A.D.C. to the Viceroy, heard that there was a position for a young Royal Engineer who was good at mathematics and recommended Burrard's name to Lord Ripon. Burrard worked at Dehra Dun under J.B.N. Hennessey and C.T. Haig. Working with Heaviside and Strahan, he examined the causes of minute triangulation errors. These they determined by experiments as being caused by the attraction of the plumbline to the Himalayan mountains. This was further analyzed by John Henry Pratt.[1][2]

In 1887 Burrard married Gertrude Ellen the daughter of the Superintendent of the Trigonometrical Survey, Major-General C.T. Haig. Burrard went on furlough in 1890 to England where his wife, an artist, spent time to study painting. During this time Burrard worked on a family genealogy.[1]

Burrard later worked at a tidal observatory on the Red Sea. In 1899 he was appointed Superintendent of the Trigonometrical Survey and became a Surveyor General in 1908. He was made C.S.I. in 1911 and K.C.S.I. in 1914, and in 1913 he received the Victoria Medal from the Royal Geographical Society. Burrard helped to organized the Indian Science Congress. He left India in 1919 and retired to Farnborough. Lady Burrard died in 1928. They had a son and a daughter.

He succeeded his cousin as a baronet on 1933 and in 1935 he married Alice Simons but she died in 1938. Depressed and with a weakening eyesight, Burrard died in 1943.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Lenox-Conyngham, G. P. (1944). "Sidney Gerald Burrard. 1860-1943". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 4 (13): 507–522. doi:10.2307/768844. JSTOR 768844.
  2. Lenox-Conyngham, G. P. (1943-10-01). "COLONEL SIR SIDNEY GERALD BURRARD, Bart., K.C.S.I., F.R.S". Empire Survey Review. 7 (50): 146–155. doi:10.1179/sre.1943.7.50.146. ISSN 0267-1034.
Baronetage of Great Britain
Preceded by
Sir Harry Paul Burrard
Baronet
(of Walhampton)
1933– 1943
Succeeded by
Sir Gerald Burrard
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