Reg Skrimshire Explained

Reg Skrimshire
Birth Name:Reginald Truscott Skrimshire
Birth Date:1878 1, df=y
Birth Place:Crickhowell, Wales[1]
Death Place:High Salvington, England[2]
Ru Position:Centre
Ru Amateuryears:?-1897
1897–1903
1903–?
1898–1899
?
Ru Amateurclubs:Blaenavon RFC
Newport RFC
Blackheath F.C.
Barbarian F.C.
Western Province
Ru Nationalteam:Wales
British Lions
Ru Nationalyears:1899
1903
Ru Nationalcaps:3
3
Ru Nationalpoints:0
(1)
Occupation:Civil engineer
School:Monmouth School

Reginald Truscott Skrimshire (30 January 1878 – 20 September 1963) was a Welsh international rugby union forward who played club rugby for Newport and county rugby for Kent. He won three caps for Wales and was the only Welsh representative on the 1903 British Isles tour.

Career

Skrimshire was born in Crickhowell in 1878, and educated at Monmouth School.

He became a civil engineer who worked mainly in Ceylon, Southern Africa and India. Employed by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office he built railways and bridges in the former British Empire, his most notable work being the railway from Johannesburg to the Victoria Falls, including the famous bridge over the falls. He died at Swan Dean Hospital in High Salvington, England in 1963.

Rugby career

After playing his early rugby with Blaenavon he moved to first class side Newport. He made his Newport debut against English side Moseley in 1897, and in his first season scored 16 tries in 24 matches, a good return for a centre. Skrimshire was regarded as a fast and agile runner who had a cool head and good positional ability, though he was noted as being greedy with the ball and needed to release more to his wing players.

Skrimshire was first selected for Wales against England on 9 January 1899 at St Helens in front of a Welsh record crowd of 20,000.[3] Wales ran out comfortable winners and Skrimshire was back in the team for the Scotland game two months later. Although Wales lost the match against Scotland, he retained his place for the final game of the 1899 tournament against Ireland. Ireland won the a much disrupted game, caused by crowd trouble, and took the Triple Crown. It would be Skrimshire's last match for Wales.

In 1903 Skrimshire was selected for Mark Morrison's British Isles team to South Africa. Skrimshire was the only Welsh representative but integrated well and played in all but one of the 22 matches including all three tests against the South African team. Skrimshire was the only threequarter to have improved his reputation during the tour[4] and scored an excellent try in the first test at Johannesburg. He finished the tour as the team's highest scorer and would later move to South Africa and played for Western Province.

International matches played

Wales[5]

British Isles

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. http://www.wru.co.uk/12750_14256.php?player=26309&includeref=dynamic Welsh Rugby Union player profiles
  2. http://www.blackandambers.co.uk/Personnel.aspx?pr=107277 Newport RFC player profile
  3. Godwin (1984), pg 55.
  4. Griffiths (1987), 9:4.
  5. Smith (1980), pg 471.