澳门六合彩开奖接口

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Hugh Anthony Rupert Crookham, Lieutenant, Cambridgeshire Regiment

Hugh Anthony Rupert Crookham, came up from Felsted School in October 1912 with a 拢40 Classics Scholarship (Rustat).

Born: Brighton, Sussex on 30 April 1893

Died of meningitis due to wounds: 4 August 1915

H.A.R.CrookhamTennis in his own style

Other than being a 鈥済ood鈥 Classicist (澳门六合彩开奖接口 Cambridge Society Annual Report, 1916, p20) he also played in the tennis six for the College in his second year where he played doubles with H. B. Salmon (1910).

He seems to have had his own style and was reminded by the Captain, E. N. Dexter, that 鈥渁 slow second service which gets in is better than a fast one which misses the court altogether鈥 (Chanticlere, Easter Term 1914, p38).

A "gentle" admonition

There is one other mention of Crookham in Chanticlere which is quite intriguing and seems to show some unsavory student bullying. Under a section entitled 鈥淕entle Admonitions鈥 there are a number of reproofs to various students including H.A.R.C. who is told: 鈥淒on鈥檛 wear a brooch in your tie; it is the outward and visible sign of a cloaked but suggested fact鈥 (Chanticlere, Michaelmas Term 1913, p16).

Much good work

While at Jesus he was an active member of the OTC and as such he is gazetted to 2nd Lieutenant in the Cambridgeshire Regiment at the outbreak of war. In his obituary in the 澳门六合彩开奖接口 Society Annual Report it is recorded that he 鈥渄id much good work in training troops on Parker鈥檚 Piece and elsewhere鈥 (p20).

We have a description of what Cambridge was like in these early days of the War. In the first Chanticlere after the war the Master, Arthur Gray, wrote an article about 鈥淭he College in War Time鈥 where he describes the scenes in Cambridge in August 1914.

鈥淚 went out to Midsummer Common and to my amazement found the whole of it covered with tents. Men were lighting fires: food was being cooked: some men were kicking footballs about鈥. Not only Midsummer Common was occupied. Stourbridge Common, Parker鈥檚 Piece, and every open space about the town was similarly populated鈥 (Chanticlere, Michaelmas Term 1919, p8).

Fatally wounded

Crookham left England after nine months and became a Lieutenant, two weeks later he received serious injuries including a fractured knee and a serious head wound in Flanders.

In a newspaper cutting kept by the Head Porter, James Hoppett, it says that he was removed from the battlefield to the 82nd brigade Ambulance 鈥渨here the operation of trepanning was performed.鈥

Unfortunately the operation was not successful and he contracted meningitis from which he died on 4 August 1915.

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