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Walter Selby Buckmaster (16 October 1872 – 30 October 1942) was a British polo player in the 1900 Summer Olympics and in the 1908 Summer Olympics.[1]

Walter Selby Buckmaster
Vanity Fair caricature by Spy (Leslie Ward), 4 September 1907.
Born(1872-10-16)16 October 1872
Kingston, Surrey, England
Died30 October 1942(1942-10-30) (aged 70)
Warwick, Warwickshire, England
NationalityBritish
OccupationStock broker
Known forOlympic Silver Medalist – Polo
SpouseIda Sarah Buckmaster (nee Blyth)
Olympic medal record
Men's polo
Representing a Mixed team
Silver medal – second place 1900 Paris Team competition
Representing  United Kingdom
Silver medal – second place 1908 London Team competition

Biography

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He was born on 16 October 1872 in Wimbledon, Surrey, the son of Thomas Walter Buckmaster (1845–1873) and Emma Caroline Venables (1848–1875). His father's sister, Maria Sarah Buckmaster was the mother of Alfred North Whitehead, the renowned mathematician and philosopher. Buckmaster was educated at Repton and Trinity College, Cambridge.[2] He played association football for both Repton and Cambridge and was a member and later Captain of the Cambridge polo team.

From Cambridge he had a career in the stock exchange joining with a fellow old Old Reptonian, Charles Armytage-Moore to become a founding partner in Buckmaster & Moore. He kept up his interest in sport particularly polo, and in 1900 he was part of the BLO Polo Club Rugby Polo at the 1900 Summer Olympics polo team which won the silver medal. In 1908 as a member of the Hurlingham Club he won the Olympic silver medal again. Buckmaster was a member of the winning team in the International Polo Cup, (also called the Newport Cup and the Westchester Cup) in 1902 playing at Hurlingham. The trophy was created in 1876 and was played for by teams from the United States and Great Britain.

He married Ida Sarah Blyth in June 1896 in St Marylebone Church, London. They had two daughters, Eulalie Agnes Selby in 1901 and Beryl Evelyn Tracey in 1904. Although he was over age (42), he served in the Great War (1914–1918) in the Service Sanitaire (Ambulance), attached to the French Army.

Buckmaster lived initially in London's Mayfair at addresses in South and Stratton Streets during the war years and early 1920s. In 1928 moved to the country living at Moreton Manor,[3] Moreton Morrell and became Master of the Warwickshire Foxhounds. He died on 30 October 1942 at Warwick aged 70.

 

References

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  1. ^ "Walter Buckmaster". Olympedia. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  2. ^ "Buckmaster, Walter Selby (BKMR891WS)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. ^ "Moreton Manor, Moreton Morrell, Warwickshire".

Sources

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  • The London Gazette, 2 April 1926, Buckmaster & Moore Partnership Notice [1]
  • The London Gazette, 26 March 1929, Buckmaster & Moore Partnership Notice [2]
  • The New York Times, 30 April 1913, Headline: ‘ENGLISH TEAM POLO TEAM LOSES BUCKMASTER’ [3]
  • The New York Times, 4 May 1914, Headline: ‘POLO INVADERS WORRIED’
  • Bailey's Magazine of Sports & Pastimes: No. 486 August 1900 Vol. LXXIV, Brief biographical article plus full length image in Polo kit
  • Book: 'Hints for Polo Combination', with Captain Lionel Sadleir-Jackson, London, Vinton & Co. 1910,
  • National Portrait Gallery: Walter Selby Buckmaster, by Ernest Clarence Elliott, for Elliott & Fry collotype, published 1904 acquired, 1984 [4]
  • Vanity Fair Print: Walter S. Buckmaster, dated 4 September 1907 The Caption Reads 'Buck' [5]
  • Olympic Sports – Polo 1900/1908: [6]
  • Newspaper cutting: Boston Evening Transcript, 14 April 1913 (WS Buckmaster Hurt after fall) [7]
  • Newspaper cutting: The New York Times, 10 August 1913 (Walter Buckmaster hurt after car crash) [8]
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  • Walter Buckmaster at Olympedia 
  • Westminster Abbey 'BANNER OF ST EDWARD THE CONFESSOR' This was designed by Christopher Webb and presented in 1945 by Eulalie Buckmaster in memory of her father. On a plate on the banner pole is the inscription "In memory of Walter Selby Buckmaster October 16, 1872: October 30, 1942". It is of cloth of gold embroidered in rich silks with a figure of St Edward the Confessor holding a model of the Abbey which he built and a charter of foundation. The shields of arms of St Peter, St John the Evangelist, the Abbey monastery and the Collegiate Church are shown.[9]
  • British Red Cross Society; World War, 1914–1918, Author Laurence Binyon, Hodder & Stoughton, London (FOR DAUNTLESS FRANCE an account of Britain's aid to the French wounded and victims of the war -reference to W S Buckmaster) [10]
  • Mr. Poilu Notes and Sketches with the Fighting French, Herbert Ward, Hodder & Stoughton, London [11](references to Walter Buckmaster)