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


      Rugby Union career




      = Amateur career

      =
      Turner was educated at Sedbergh and Trinity College, Oxford. 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.


      = International career

      =
      He was capped 15 times for Scotland in 1911–14, becoming captain of the squad in 1914. 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. James Huggan and John George Will also played in this match. He also played first-class cricket, for the Oxford University Cricket Club.


      Military career


      He was killed in World War I 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.
      He is buried in an isolated plot in Kemmel churchyard, not in one of the larger Commonwealth cemeteries. He was buried in the Kemmel churchyard next to Percy Dale Kendall who captained England in 1903. His grave was prepared by Dr Noel Chavasse VC and Bar, MC, who also died at Ypres in August 1917. The battlefield consumed both graves and Kendal and Turner's remains have never been found. [2]


      See also


      List of international rugby union players killed in action during the First World War


      References


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


      External links


      Commonwealth War Graves database
      An entire team wiped out by the Great War (The Scotsman)

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