Edgar Hose
Edgar Geoffrey Stanley Hose (22 Jul 1867 – 21 Oct 1943) was an English international hockey player.
Early life
[edit]Edgar Hose was born in Camberwell, then in Surrey, the second son of John and Maria Henley Robinson.[1] His mother died before he was ten years old, and his widowed father married for a second time, to Jemima Closs Fieldwick. From this second marriage, Edgar gained two younger brothers, Henry Fieldwick Hose and Arthur Steains Hose[2] He had a younger sister, Mary, (born in 1870). Edgar's father, throughout this period, was involved in the manufacture of linen. Hose was educated at Dulwich College.
Hockey
[edit]As a hockey player he played at outside-right and represented Bromley, Kent, South of England, and England[3] In 1897, Hose made his first appearance for the England national field hockey team against Ireland, and went on to play for them twice in 1899 (against ireland and Wales).[4]
He remained involved in hockey after he had ceased to play the game. In 1899 he wrote a chapter in J. Nicholson Smith and Philip A. Robson's Hockey: historical and practical, his chapter being dedicated to his position of Outside-right. In this publication he stated that: "Outside-right has been justly called the easiest place to fill satisfactorily in a hockey team.".[5] He later became the honorary secretary to the All England Women's Hockey Association (AEWHA) in 1899[6] just four years after the founding of that association.
Later life
[edit]Edgar married Kate in 1893 and they had a daughter, Dorothy Enid.[7] Edgar Hose died on 21 Oct 1943 aged 76, his death being registered in Cheltenham.[8]
References
[edit]- ^ 1871 England Census, Class: RG10; Piece: 689; Folio: 17; Page: 25; GSU roll: 823334
- ^ 1881 England Census, Class: RG11; Piece: 670; Folio: 59; Page: 6; GSU roll: 1341156.
- ^ J. Nicholson Smith, Philip A. Robson, Hockey: historical and practical, Issue 9, page ix, (Publisher - Innes), 1899
- ^ "Old Alleynian International Sportsmen – reports from The Alleynian, 1873 to date". The Alleynian. Dulwich College. Archived from the original on 19 May 2011. Retrieved 15 October 2008.
- ^ J. Nicholson Smith, Philip A. Robson, Hockey: historical and practical, Issue 9, page 224, (Publisher - Innes), 1899
- ^ The Academy and literature, Volume 56, p 301, 1899
- ^ Census Returns of England and Wales, 1901, Class: RG13; Piece: 691; Folio: 149; Page: 37.
- ^ General Register Office. England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes. London, England: General Register Office