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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Reverend Henry Charles Lenox Tindall (4 February 1863 – 10 June 1940) was a British head master, priest and world-record-holding track athlete; he was also an English first-class cricketer active 1893–95 who played for Kent. He was born in Margate and died in Peasmarsh.[1][2]

Tindall was born in Margate, Kent, on 4 February 1863 and was educated at Christ's College, Cambridge; while at university he ran and swam, and in 1884–1885 he was Cambridge quarter-mile champion.[3] In 1886, he was president of the University Athletic Club, in the same year he won both the 100 yards and quarter-mile race against Oxford University.[3] In 1888 he won the quarter-mile Amateur Athletic Association championship.[3]

In 1889 he won a quarter of a mile race in 48.5 seconds, a world record that also stood as a British amateur record until 1911.[3] After university he played Rugby for Rosalyn Park and in cricket appeared for Kent from 1893 to 1895.[3] In 1894 he appeared at a match in Hastings for the South of England against The Australians. Tindall was also a member of the Rye Golf Club from 1894 until is death.[3]

He left Cambridge with a second-class degree in the mathematics tripos and he had also been a Tancred Divinity Scholar.[3] He became a mathematical master at Hurst Court School in Hastings, becoming the headmaster in 1905.[3] In 1934 he left the school to become rector of Iden.[3]

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References

  1. ^ Henry Tindall, CricketArchive. Retrieved 2020-06-05. (subscription required)
  2. ^ Carlaw D (2020) Kent County Cricketers A to Z. Part One: 1806–1914 (revised edition), pp. 529–530. (Available online at the Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. Retrieved 2020-12-21.)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Famous Athelete [sic?] - The Rev H.C.L. Tindall". Hastings and St Leonards Observer. 15 June 1940. p. 7.


This page was last edited on 13 February 2024, at 11:34
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