On 29 May 1914 Burkitt was sentenced to two years imprisonment in HM Prison
Ipswich. She suggested that the judge should put on the
black cap and sentence her to death. In prison, she went on
hunger strike and thirst strike and was
force-fed for the entirety of her remand period before being moved to
Holloway Prison. A suffragette released from Holloway at the end of July 1914 stated that Burkitt was being force-fed up to four times a day. She "suffers agonies with her nerves ... She is sick after every feeding ... Her throat is in a terrible condition." Although in good health in prison Burkitt regularly complained of chest pains at night which the prison authorities said were due to indigestion. At the same time her weight loss was recorded which had dropped to 98 lbs by mid-July 1914 - "16 lbs below average weight for her height". It was often recorded that Burkitt was "hysterical" during force-feeding. On 7 August 1914 Burkitt petitioned the
Home Office for release, writing: "I’ve been in prison since April 28th and have been forcibly fed during the whole time, 292 times so far." Burkitt pleaded "reply to my Petition at once, as if I should die through my fasting, my death will lie at your door." She was the last suffragette to be force-fed in
Holloway Prison. ==Later years==