Peter Denis Hill-Wood (25 February 1936 - 27 December 2018) was a British businessman and a chairman of Arsenal Football Club.
Hill-Wood was born in Kensington, London, son of Denis Hill-Wood and his wife Mary Smith. His father, three uncles and grandfather all played first-class cricket for Derbyshire County Cricket Club.
Peter Hill-Wood attended Ludgrove School[1] and Eton College, where he was a classmate of former Arsenal director Sir Roger Gibbs. He then served in the Coldstream Guards. After leaving the Guards, Hill-Wood entered the banking industry, eventually rising to become a vice-chairman of Hambros Bank, having previously been in charge of its investment division.
After Hill-Wood retired from his post at Hambros, he was a director of Cavenham Ltd and Hellenic and General Trust.
He was the third generation of his family to serve as chairman of Arsenal, following his father, Denis Hill-Wood (in office 1962–1982), and his grandfather, Samuel Hill-Wood (1929–1936 and 1946–1949) from Glossop, Derbyshire. Hill-Wood joined the Arsenal board in October 1962.Evening TelegraphSat, 13 Oct 1962 ·Page 23 Peter succeeded his father after the latter's death in 1982. He was not in charge of any day-to-day business at the club, which was generally run by David Dein and a succession of first team managers.
Hill-Wood was a colleague of Chips Keswick – a former Bank of England director[2] [3] – at Hambros and subsequently saw him recruited to the Arsenal board to provide strong City of London contacts at a time when the club were financing their new stadium.[4]
Hill-Wood sold much of his family holdings in the club to former vice-chairman David Dein in the 1980s and 1990s and the rest to Stan Kroenke.
On 14 June 2013 Hill-Wood stepped down and was replaced as chairman by Keswick.
He married Sally Andrews in 1971 and had three children.[7]
On 2 December 2012, Arsenal announced Hill-Wood had suffered a heart attack and was recovering in hospital.[8] [9]
Peter Hill-Wood died late in the evening of 27 December 2018, aged 82. http://www.thearsenalhistory.com/?p=15646[10]