Frederick Harding Turner

Frederick Harding Turner (29 May 1888 – 10 January 1915) was a Scotland international rugby union player.

Frederick Turner
Birth nameFrederick Harding Turner
Date of birth(1890-01-10)10 January 1890
Place of birthLiverpool, England
Date of death1 July 1916(1916-07-01) (aged 26)
Place of deathKemmelberg, Belgium
UniversityTrinity College, Oxford
Rugby union career
Position(s) Flanker
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
- Oxford University ()
Provincial / State sides
Years Team Apps (Points)
1911
  • Whites Trial
()
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1911-14 Scotland 15 37
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Battles/warsBattle of the Somme

Rugby Union career

Amateur career

Turner was educated at Sedbergh and Trinity College, Oxford.[1] He played for Oxford University, and Liverpool.

Provincial career

He played for the Whites Trial side against the Blues Trial side on 21 January 1911 while still with Oxford University.[2]

International career

He was capped 15 times for Scotland in 1911–14, becoming captain of the squad in 1914.[3] Turner was a back-row forward, who had taken the kicks in the last match before the war: a Calcutta Cup match at Inverleith (Edinburgh), which Scotland lost 15–16.[4] James Huggan and John George Will also played in this match.[4] He also played first-class cricket, for the Oxford University Cricket Club.[5]

Military career

He was killed in World War I[3] in the trenches near Kemmel on 10 January 1915 in a trench occupied by his platoon of the Liverpool Scottish when overseeing the organisation of a barbed wire entanglement.[4][6]

He is buried in an isolated plot in Kemmel churchyard, not in one of the larger Commonwealth cemeteries.

See also

References

  • Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007 ISBN 1-905326-24-6)


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