Charles Eugene Williams

Charles Williams (1888-1935) was English rackets world champion.

Charles Williams
Full nameCharles Eugene Williams
Country (sports)England
Born(1888-07-28)July 28, 1888
East Fulham, London
DiedOctober 27, 1935(1935-10-27) (aged 47)
Chicago, United States

Rackets career

Williams became a professional rackets player and the school coach at a young age, playing from the Harrow Club at Harrow School.[1] In January 1911 he competed in and won the Open Championship of England defeating Edgar Maximilian Baerlein.[2] Just over three months later he was the challenger for the World Championship against the holder Jamsetji Merwanji from India. Williams won the first leg at the Queen's Club[3] and then in the second leg played out a draw at the Prince's Club after he had already secured the one game he needed to claim the title outright. He had become the world champion aged just 22.[4]

He lost the Championship to Jock Soutar from the United States in 1913 before failing to regain the title in a rematch in 1922. He finally regained the Championship after beating Soutar in 1929.

Personal Life

Born in East Fulham in 1888 he was a ball boy at the Prince's Club before turning professional. During the journey to defend his title in 1912 he boarded the RMS Titanic as a second class passenger. After it sank he was rescued by the RMS Carpathia and developed pneumonia.[5] [6] He resided in the United States from 1924 and was married and had six children.

He died in 1935 while living in Chicago aged 47.

References & Notes

gollark: Linear time doesn't mean it won't take unreasonable amounts of apiotime though.
gollark: You could use some sort of FSMable regex subset, yes.
gollark: Every sufficiently complicated Discord bot eventually evolves a bad custom CLI argument parser, an economy somehow, and some kind of limited on scope esolang.
gollark: What it ABRHighlight deterministic finite automaton?
gollark: > doesn't abrhighlight already exist for gollarkNo comment.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.