Kynaston Studd

Sir Kynaston Studd, Bt

JEK Studd
Personal information
Full name Sir John Edward Kynaston Studd
Born (1858-07-26)26 July 1858
Tidworth, Wiltshire, England
Died 14 January 1944(1944-01-14) (aged 85)
Marylebone, London, England
Nickname John

Sir John Edward Kynaston Studd, 1st Baronet OBE (26 July 1858 – 14 January 1944), known as "JEK", was a British cricketer, businessman and Lord Mayor of London.

Family

The Studd brothers

Studd was born at Tedworth House, Tidworth, Wiltshire. He married, firstly, Hilda Proctor-Beauchamp, daughter of Sir Thomas William Brograve Proctor-Beauchamp, 4th Bt. and Hon. Catherine Esther Waldegrave, on 10 December 1884. He married, secondly, Princess Alexandra Lieven, daughter of Prince Paul Lieven, on 18 June 1924. He died in Marylebone, London, on 14 January 1944, at age 85.

Children of Sir John Edward Kynaston Studd, 1st Bt. and Hilda Proctor-Beauchamp:

Sporting career

Cricketing Studds

Sir Kynaston was the eldest but the last of the famous three Studd Brothers who captained Cambridge in consecutive seasons who also later gained high renown in his other walks of life before his death on 14 January 1944.

At Eton, Kynaston was never on the losing side in the needle matches against Harrow and Winchester. In 1879 Kynaston went up to Trinity College, Cambridge,[1] and was four years in the XI without ever excelling in the annual University match; things moved on in 1882 when he and his brothers took an important role in defeating by six wickets the great Australian side (which later in the season beat England at Kennington Oval) by seven runs. In the match Kynaston scored 6 and 66, G B. 42 and 48, C. T. 118 and 17 not out. When Cambridge batted a second time requiring 165 runs for victory, the two elder brothers put up 106.

Olympics

Studd at the 1908 Olympic Games in London

With the 1908 London Games being the first true Summer Olympics to feature a parade of nations, cricketer Kynaston Studd can be said to be the first person to carry the flag for Great Britain at an Olympic event. However, cricket was only played at the 1900 Olympic Games (see: Cricket at the 1900 Summer Olympics) and Studd was therefore not a competitor.[2]

University and beyond

While still at university, Kynaston was president of Cambridge Inter-Collegiate Christian Union and was involved in helping his brother Charles set up and become one of the famous Cambridge Seven missionaries to China.

After leaving Cambridge, where he was a member of the University Pitt Club,[3] Kynaston played occasionally for Middlesex, but spent most of his time on business and the Royal Polytechnic Institute where he was President from 1903 until his death.

After serving as Sheriff of London for 1922-23, he was knighted in 1923 and became Lord Mayor of London in 1928. He was created Baronet at the end of his official year. When President of the MCC in September 1930 he gave a banquet at Merchant Taylors' Hall to the Australian team captained by W. M. Woodfull.

Canon F. H. Gillingham, the old Dulwich College and Essex batsman, in his address at the Memorial Service in St. Paul's Cathedral, said that after coming down from Cambridge Kynaston realised that games were only a preparation for sterner duties, and in his presence it was easier for men to be good and harder to be bad. "Everything he touched he lifted up."

His great-nephew Sir Peter Malden Studd was also Lord Mayor of London from 1970-1972.

See also

References

  1. STUDD, Sir (John Edward) Kynaston, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2016 (online edition, Oxford University Press, 2014, accessed 12 Nov 2016)
  2. Williamson, Martin. The ignorant Olympians. 9 August 2008. Cricinfo. ESPN. Accessed 26 October 2011.
  3. Fletcher, Walter Morley (2011) [1935]. The University Pitt Club: 1835-1935 (First Paperback ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 44. ISBN 978-1-107-60006-5.
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
New creation
Baronet
(of Netheravon)
1929–1944
Succeeded by
Eric Studd
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