Godfrey Darbishire

Godfrey Darbishire FRGS (26 September 1853 – 29 October 1889)[1] was an English-born rugby union forward who represented Bangor at club level and played international rugby for Wales, gaining one cap in the country's very first international rugby match.

Godfrey Darbishire
Birth nameGodfrey Darbishire
Date of birth(1853-09-26)26 September 1853
Place of birthChorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester, England
Date of death29 October 1889(1889-10-29) (aged 36)
Place of deathPolk County, Florida, United States
SchoolRugby School
UniversityBalliol College, Oxford
SpouseAnnie Shelby
ChildrenRobert Shelby Darbishire
Occupation(s)Civil engineer and surveyor
Rugby union career
Position(s) Forward
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
Bangor RFC ()
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1881 Wales 1 (0)

Personal life

Godfrey Darbishire was born in Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester, in 1853. He was educated at Rugby School[2] before graduating to Balliol College, Oxford.[3] After spending 18 months at Oxford, his father removed him from the university to rejoin the family. Darbishire moved to North Wales, where his family were quarry owners, well known in the Caernarvonshire area. Darbishire settled in the town of Penmaenmawr where he stayed at Pendyffryn Hall,[4] the family's manor house.[5] The 1881 census records Darbishire's profession as a civil engineer and surveyor,[4] which has some connection to the family's business in stone quarrying.

In 1883, Darbishire emigrated to America where he carried out important surveys of the state. While in America he met Annie Stein Shelby of Chicago. They married in Danville, Kentucky, on 3 June 1885, and had one known child, Robert Shelby Derbishire in 1886, by which time the family had moved to Fort Meade in Florida,[6] where Darbishire had become an orange farmer. It was while living in Polk County that Darbishire died on 29 October 1889, after becoming ill from exposure while on a small boat in the sea off Key West. He was 36 years of age.

Rugby career

The first Welsh team, Darbishire is standing in the back row, third from right, February 1881

Darbishire began playing rugby while a schoolboy, playing for the Rugby School team.[2] He continued his enjoyment of sport while at Oxford University, playing rugby and joining the boat club, and when he settled in the family's North Wales home he turned out for Bangor cricket club a few miles down the coast. By 1876, the cricket team had branched out and formed a rugby team, of which Darbishire was one of the first players. With a lack of opposition, the team also played association football.

In 1881, Richard Mullock arranged the first international fixture for a Welsh team, to be played at Blackheath in London, against England. The problem was that Mullock did not have a team. In an attempt to gain the support of as many regions of Wales as possible, Mullock began selecting "gentlemen" players based on their geographic location. Darbishire fitted this profile, with a schooling at Rugby and Oxford and a membership of one of the few northern clubs. Even the fact that he had not played a rugby game in over two years was not seen as a drawback.[2]

The game against England was a sporting disaster, with the Welsh team meeting without any trials. Few of them had played together and several of the players were placed out of position. The English team scored 13 tries, winning the game by eight goals to nil. The Welsh team were humiliated and only four of the fifteen players returned against Ireland in the country's second international. It was Darbishire's one and only appearance for Wales.[1]

International matches played

Wales (rugby union)

Bibliography

  • Smith, David; Williams, Gareth (1980). Fields of Praise: The Official History of The Welsh Rugby Union. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. ISBN 0-7083-0766-3.
gollark: They are more tied up with Microsoft data harvesting, and Microsoft randomly beesed mine until I gave them a phone number.
gollark: Troubling.
gollark: 1.12.2 is quite an old version, are they still updating it?
gollark: JS is typically JITed, non-LuaJIT Lua isn't. That may do things.
gollark: There was that fun potatOS website which actually potatOS.

References

  1. Godfrey Darbishire player profile Scrum.com
  2. Smith (1980), pg 43.
  3. Smith (1980), pg 40.
  4. 1881 census information
  5. W.E. Gladstone and Penmaenmawr Penmaenmawr.com
  6. Shelby family history trolinger.com
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.