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Charles Hooper

Charles Hooper
Full name Charles ALexander Hooper
Date of birth (1869-06-06)6 June 1869
Place of birth Stonehouse, England
Date of death 16 September 1950(1950-09-16) (aged 81)
Place of death Taplow, England
School Clifton College
University Trinity College, Cambridge
Occupation(s) solicitor
Rugby union career
Position(s) Centre
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
?
1888–1891
?-1894
1891–1893
1894–?
Clifton RFC
Cambridge University R.U.F.C.
Middlesex Wanderers
Barbarian F.C.
Richmond F.C.
Gloucestershire
()
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1894  England 3 (0)
Position(s) Centre
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
?
1888–1891
?-1894
1891–1893
1894–?
Clifton RFC
Cambridge University R.U.F.C.
Middlesex Wanderers
Barbarian F.C.
Richmond F.C.
Gloucestershire
()
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1894  England 3 (0)

Charles Alexander Hooper (6 July 1869 – 16 September 1950) was an English rugby union forward who played club rugby for Cambridge University and Middlesex Wanderers and international rugby for England. In 1890 Hooper became one of the original members of the Barbarians Football Club.

Hooper was born in Stonehouse, Gloucestershire in 1869 to Charles Henry Hooper, and was educated at Clifton College, where he was head boy, before matriculating to Trinity College, Cambridge in 1888. He received his BA in 1891, and in 1914 he eimgrated to Hong Kong where he practised as a solicitor. With the outbreak of World War I, he served in the Hong Kong Special Police Force. He returned to England later in his life, dying in 1950 at Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire, from a cerebal haemorrhage.

While at Clifton College, Hooper played both rugby football and cricket for the college team. After entering Cambridge, Hooper joined the University team, and played in the Varsity Match of 1890. The Cambridge team for the 1890 encounter contained several players that would go on to play at international level, and Gregor MacGregor, Thomas Storey, Randolph Aston and Charles Nicholl, would all join Hooper as original members of the Barbarians later that season. The Varsity Match ended in a draw, with both teams scoring a goal, in a match that was postponed on three occasions due to fog.

In the 1890/91 season, Hooper was approached to join the newly formed invitational touring club the Barbarians. In accepting, Hooper became one of the team's original members and represented the team on the pitch nine times. Although only appearing in one winning team, he scored four tries, including two in the win over Devonshire in April 1891. Away from the playing field, Hooper also represented the Barbarians as a committee member.


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