Frederick Burrows

British Indian politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sir Frederick John Burrows GCSI GCIE MSM DL JP (3 July 1887 – 23 April 1973[1]) was a British trade unionist who served as the last British Governor of Bengal during the British Raj in India.

Preceded byThe Lord Casey
Succeeded byOffice dissolved
Born(1887-07-03)3 July 1887
Died23 April 1973(1973-04-23) (aged 85)
Quick facts Governor of the Bengal Presidency, Preceded by ...
Sir Frederick Burrows
Governor of the Bengal Presidency
In office
19 February 1946  15 August 1947
Preceded byThe Lord Casey
Succeeded byOffice dissolved
Personal details
Born(1887-07-03)3 July 1887
Died23 April 1973(1973-04-23) (aged 85)
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Biography

He was Governor of Bengal from 19 February 1946 to 14 August 1947.[2] He was against the partition of Bengal.[3] Burrows was a former Ross railway man and he was the president of the National Union of Railwaymen, the union representing railway workers in England.

Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart records: "He had endeared himself to the Burrah Sahibs of Calcutta (Kolkata) with one of his first speeches when, alluding to his modest beginning on the railway, he said, 'When you gentlemen were huntin' and shootin', I was shuntin' and hootin'. He seemed to me to be far more proud of having been a sergeant-major in the Grenadier Guards in the First World War than he was of being Governor of Bengal."[4]

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