Pandurang belonged to a highly educated and influential family and his circle of acquaintances included reformists from across the country. When
Rabindranath Tagore intended to visit England in 1878, he stayed for a time in their Bombay home and sought to improve his English with the assistance of Pandurang's second daughter Annapurna or Ana. It is believed that the two were attracted to each other and Tagore wrote several poems in her memory (he referred to her as "Nalini"). Ana Turkhud, however, married
Harold Littledale, professor of history and English literature at Baroda on 11 November 1880 and died in Edinburgh on 5 July 1891. Ana's older brother Moreshwar Atmaram obtained a gold medal in Practical Chemistry and obtained honours in mathematics and geology at
University College London in 1867 and was a vice-principal at Rajkumar College in Baroda. Another daughter Manek Turkhud passed the Licensiate of Medicine and Surgery from Bombay in 1892. In the same year, the daughter of
Dadabhai Naoroji, Maneckbai also passed the same examination. Another son Dnyaneshwar Atmaram Turkhud (1862-1943) studied at the Grant Medical College and at the
University of Edinburgh from 1890 to 1891. He worked at the
Haffkine Institute and served as a director of the
King Institute of Preventive Medicine and Research at
Guindy and worked in
Kodaikanal on
Anopheles mosquitoes until his death. == See also ==