John Marshall Dugdale
Birth name | John Marshall Dugdale[1] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Date of birth | 15 October 1851[1] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Salford, England[1] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Date of death | 30 October 1918[1] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Place of death | Llanfyllin (aged 67 years 15 days)[1] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
School | Rugby School[2] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
University | Brasenose College, Oxford | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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John Marshall Dugdale (1851-1918) was a rugby union international who represented England in the first international rugby match in 1871.[1]
Early life
[edit]John Marshall Dugdale was born at Irwell Bank, Eccles, Lancashire on 15 October 1851 and baptised at Eccles on 1 January 1852.[3] He was the son of John Dugdale, Esq. of 9, Hyde Park Gardens, London[4] and Llwyn, Llanfyllin, County Montgomery.[5] He attended Rugby School[3] and Brasenose College, Oxford where he received his B.A.[3]
Rugby union career
[edit]Dugdale, having played rugby at school, went on to play for Ravenscourt Park FC, a stronghold of Old Rugbeians. He, along with nine other former pupils of Rugby School, was selected to play in the first international match in 1871.[2] The match was played on 27 March 1871 at Edinburgh against Scotland, and the hosts won.[1]
Career
[edit]Following his education, he moved to London, giving him the opportunity to play for Ravenscourt Park. In London he trained as a barrister,[3] was a student of the Inner Temple from 18 January 1871 and subsequently called to the bar on 26 January 1875.[5] He was a member of the Oxford and Cambridge Club.[5]
He then moved to Montgomeryshire and became a member of the Northern circuit as a Justice of the Peace.[5] He became extremely active in political, military and administrative circles of Montgomeryshire. In 1872 he became the Cornet (Supernumerary) of the Yeomanry Cavalry of Montgomeryshire[6] and later Major of the Yeomanry from 1889 to 1892.[7] In February 1893, he became the Deputy Lieutenant of Montgomeryshire.[8] and served as Mayor of Llanfyllin from 1893 to 1899.[7] In 1896 his political career in Montgomeryshire continued to progress when he became the High Sheriff of Montgomeryshire.[9] In 1910 he was elected Mayor of Llanfyllin.[10] In addition, he was on the Board of Bangor University College.[7] He later authored a book about his chosen home, A History of the Parish of Llanfyllin from 1861 to 1915.[11]
Private life
[edit]He married Isabella Hargreaves, the only daughter of John Hargreaves of Spring Bank, Lancaster, on 20 July 1876 at Tarporley, Cheshire.[3] They had a number of children including John Percy, who attended Rugby and New College, Oxford, October from 1898 but died in 1900 in his early twenties; Maj. William Marshall Dugdale CB DSO TD (13 January 1881 – 13 November 1952), who after being in the Learning Land Agency, 1899–1901, served in the South African War of 1901–02, in the Imperial Yeomanry, leaving as a captain in 1902; and Gerald. All three sons attended Rugby School.[12]
Dugdale died on 30 October 1918 aged 67, at Llanfyllin and was buried there 2 November 1918.[13] His widow died on 28 August 1922.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i Profile of John Dugdale at scrum.com
- ^ a b c Marshall, Francis, Football; the Rugby union game, p141, (1892) (London Paris Melbourne, Cassell and company, limited)
- ^ a b c d e Howard, Joseph Jackson and Crisp, Frederick Arthur, Visitation of England and Wales (1893); (College of Arms (Great Britain)), Volume 2
- ^ Rugby School Register (1886), (Rugby school), Volume: 2
- ^ a b c d Foster, Joseph, Men-at-the-bar : a biographical hand-list of the members of the various Inns of Court, including Her Majesty's judges, etc. (1885), (London : Printed for the author by Hazell, Watson, and Viney)
- ^ The London Gazette, 4 October 1872, p. 4747
- ^ a b c Brasenose College register, 1509–1909 (Volume 1)
- ^ The London Gazette, 10 February 1893. p 757
- ^ List of Sheriffs of Montgomeryshire from the Powys Local History Encyclopedia
- ^ Crisp, Frederick Arthur and Howard, Joseph Jackson, Visitation of England and Wales, Volume: 17, Publisher: [London] Priv. print.
- ^ A History of the Parish of Llanfyllin from 1861 to 1915 is from the Collections Historical & Archæological relating to Montgomeryshire and its Borders. vol. 38. no. 1., ASIN: B000WXZMOE
- ^ RUGBY SCHOOL REGISTER, VOLUME III, FROM MAY, 1874, TO MAY, 1904.
- ^ Howard, Joseph Jackson, and Crisp, Frederick Arthur, Visitation of England and Wales, College of Arms (Great Britain) Volume: 20
- 1851 births
- 1918 deaths
- English rugby union players
- England international rugby union players
- Rugby union forwards
- People educated at Rugby School
- High sheriffs of Montgomeryshire
- Directors of the Cambrian Railways
- Montgomeryshire Yeomanry officers
- Rugby union players from Salford
- 19th-century British Army personnel
- Military personnel from Manchester
- Volunteer Force officers
- Welsh justices of the peace