Berrill was born in Australia in 1896 to English parents Arthur Edward Berrill and Clara Mary Macdermott. His father moved to Sydney in the 1870s and became an importer/exporter who was a frequent distributor of British books and periodicals abroad. The family returned to London in 1901. He was educated at the Roman Catholic
Beaumont College, Windsor. Roland served in the
Royal Artillery in the First World War; His elder brother, Lieut. Bernard Francis Berrill, was killed in 1915 in
Flanders. Although he was called to the bar, he never practised as a barrister but lived on the dividends of his investments. He spent most of the rest of his life in England. He had brief trips to
Tangier in 1936,
New York City in 1937 and
Durban, South Africa in 1959. On 22 November 1948 he spoke at the
Socratic Club at
Oxford, combining with Father Victor White, on the topic "Beyond Myth and Dogma" at
Lady Margaret Hall in the
University of Oxford. Berrill was thick-set and sturdy, with a full dark beard and moustache. He believed in
palmistry,
phrenology,
astrology, and
Dianetics. These views were not popular within Mensa, and he was regarded by Mensans as "deficient in normal scepticism". Berrill was a member of the
Men's Dress Reform Party; he desired more colour in men's clothes, and objected to the uniformity common in those days. He never married. == References ==