Background
Burgh was born Karl Hans Schweinburg on 9 December 1925 in Vienna, Austria. His father, who had practised as a barrister, died in 1937. His mother had he and his sister Lucy baptised in the Church of England.
director General secretary deputy chairman
Burgh was born Karl Hans Schweinburg on 9 December 1925 in Vienna, Austria. His father, who had practised as a barrister, died in 1937. His mother had he and his sister Lucy baptised in the Church of England.
He was educated at the Quaker Sibford School in Sibford Ferris, Oxfordshire.
He later served as President of Trinity College, Oxford (1987-1996). From his family’s flat that overlooked Vienna’s Ringstrasse, Burgh saw Adolf Hitler touring the city following the 1938 Anschluss that annexed Austria into Nazi Germany. Their mother followed on six months later.
During his time at school, he became fluent in English and did well in his examinations
However, his mother could not afford the fees for him to remain beyond 15 years old and so he left in 1941. He then began work in an aircraft factory, which he continued until the end of World World War World War II In 1946, he gained a place at the London School of Economics on an evening course.
In 1949, he was elected General Secretary of London School of Economics Students" Union. He graduated with a Bachelor of Science (Bachelor of Science) in Government in 1950.
Following graduation, Burgh joined the administrative branch of the Civil Service.
He spent his early years at the Board of Trade. In 1964, he began serving in the Department of Economic Affairs as Principal Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Economic Affairs George Brown. In 1968, he worked out of the Department of Employment as Principal Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Employment Barbara Castle.
He worked with her on the white paper In Place of Strife.
He worked for the next Secretary of State for Employment Robert Carr. With him, he helped introduce the Industrial Relations Acting 1971.
He spent two years on secondment to Community Relations Commission where he served as Deputy Chairman from 1971 to 1972. He returned to the Civil Service as the deputy secretary in charge of the Central Policy Review Staff under Lord Rothschild.
In 1974, he transferred to the Department of Prices and Consumer Protection where he was Deputy Permanent Secretary to the Secretary of State for Prices and Consumer Protection Shirley Williams.
He was personally chosen by Williams as part of her agreement to head the new department. He was Director-General of the British Council from 1980 to 1987, and President of Trinity College, Oxford from 1987 to 1996. Burgh died on 12 April 2013 of pneumonia.
He was aged 87.
United Kingdom Delegate to United Nations Conference on Trade Development 1964. Royal Northern College, of Music.
Married Ann Sturge in 1957.