Burns held several posts in the Colonial Service. He served in the
Leeward Islands from 1905 to 1912 and then became Supervisor of Customs in
Nigeria. In 1914 he enlisted in the
West Africa Frontier Force. He served in the
Cameroons Campaign and became
Adjutant of the Nigeria Land Contingent. Burns was
Private Secretary to
Sir Frederick (later Lord) Lugard then
Hugh Clifford during their times as governors of Nigeria. In 1924 Burns was appointed
Colonial Secretary of
the Bahamas, where he served until 1929 and carried out the duties of Governor on several occasions. From 1929 to 1934 he was Deputy Chief Secretary to the Government of Nigeria. Then, at the age of 47, was posted to
British Honduras, where he was Governor from 2 November 1934 until 24 February 1939. In 1940 he was seconded to the
Colonial Office on special duties, with the rank of Assistant Under-Secretary. Burns was appointed Governor of the
Gold Coast in 1941. In 1942 he served for five months as Acting
Governor of Nigeria. He then returned to the Gold Coast, where in 1942 he persuaded the Colonial Office to admit Africans onto the Executive Council of the colony. In 1946 he inspired a new constitution As a result there was an African majority on the Council. In 1943 a
ritual murder took place in
Kyebi. A jury consisting of six Gold Coast natives and one European convicted eight men of murder, but the accused had a well-funded defence, led by
J. B. Danquah, a lawyer who was a nationalist politician and a relative of some of the accused. The defence launched appeals to the UK and attempted to portray the trial as a case of "white oppression". He received a degree of support from some politicians in the UK and the case dragged on for years. Burns resigned as Governor shortly after the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council rejected the final appeal in the case. In 1959, at the age of 72, he headed a Commission of Enquiry into the Natural Resources and Population Trends of the
Colony of Fiji. In 1966 Burns used his contacts to ensure a safe exit for his niece
Dr Marca Burns from Ghana during
a coup. Burns died at
Westminster Hospital in London. ==Publications==