Beginning his career as an assistant lecturer at Liverpool University,[7] Burt was assistant government chemist and lecturer in tropical agriculture in Trinidad between 1904 and 1908,[6] before moving to India. Based in Cawnpore, he was deputy director of agriculture for Uttar Pradesh from 1908 to 1921,[8] having previously spent time collecting and classifying types of Indian wheat.[9] From 1935 he was vice-chairman of the Imperial Council of Agricultural Research (later known as the Indian Council of Agricultural Research),[10] for which he had been agricultural expert between 1929 and 1935.[7] Having served as secretary between 1921 and 1928, he became president of the Indian Central Cotton Committee,[7][11] a representative of the Asiatic Society on the Council of the National Institute of Sciences of India,[12] and President of the Indian Lac Cess Committee.[13] In addition, between 1936 and 1938 he served as the first president of the Indian Central Jute Committee (ICJC)[14] and was the first chairman of the Indian Coffee Cess Committee.[15]
Secretary of ICCC
During 1921, McKenna committee (a representative body of the British Cotton Growing Association),[16] recommended the Indian Central Cotton Committee (ICCC) to appoint Sir Chudleigh Burt Bryce, as its first secretary. The government of India set up the Cotton Committee for improving the production and marketing of Indian cotton. Today, ICCC wields a beneficent influence throughout India. Incidentally, he would have been the first to acknowledge the efficiency with which Arthur James Turner, established the Technological Laboratory, and controlled the technical research laboratories, belonging to the committee. Sir Bryce served 7 years.[citation needed]
Later life
Burt had an Armstrong Siddeley Saloon De Luxe car (either a 12 Plus or 14 HP model) shipped to India in April 1936[7] and he left that country in April 1939.[17] He lived at Allison Road, Rhos-on-Sea, Wales, in his latter years and died on 1 January 1943 at Colwyn Bay. Since leaving India he had been director of animal feeding stuffs for the Ministry of Food.[7][18]
^Randhawa, Mohindar Singh (1980). A history of agriculture in India. Vol. 3. Indian Council of Agricultural Research. p. 366. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
^"Indian Journal of Social Work". Indian Journal of Social Work. 1. The Sir Dorabji Tata Graduate School of Social Work: 308. 1941. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
^The Indian year book. Vol. 26. Bennett, Coleman & Co. 1939. p. 746. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
^Asiatic Society (Calcutta, India); Asiatic Society of Bengal (1941). Yearbook of the Asiatic Society. Vol. 6. Asiatic Society. p. 37. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
^Glover, Patrick Moore (1937). Lac cultivation in India. Indian Lac Research Institute (2nd ed.). Printed by P. C. Roy, Sri Gouranga press. Retrieved 4 December 2011.