翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Clopin Trouillefou
・ Clopodia River
・ Clopotiva River
・ Cloppenburg
・ Cloppenburg (district)
・ Cloppenburg Geest
・ Cloppenburg Museum Village
・ Cloppenburg – Vechta
・ Cloprednol
・ Clopton
・ Clopton (name)
・ Clopton Bridge
・ Clopton Havers
・ Clopton Heights, Virginia
・ Clopton House
Clopton Lloyd-Jones
・ Clopton, Alabama
・ Clopton, Cambridgeshire
・ Clopton, Gloucester County, Virginia
・ Clopton, Northamptonshire
・ Clopton, Richmond County, Virginia
・ Clopton, Suffolk
・ Clopton, Virginia
・ Clopyralid
・ Cloquet
・ Cloquet Carlton County Airport
・ Cloquet City Hall
・ Cloquet High School
・ Cloquet River
・ Cloquet Terminal Railroad


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Clopton Lloyd-Jones : ウィキペディア英語版
Clopton Lloyd-Jones

Clopton Allen Lloyd-Jones (12 November 1858 – 7 March 1918) was an English businessman and amateur sportsman, best known for football and cricket. He played for the Clapham Rovers when they won the FA Cup in 1880 and was selected, but did not play, for Wales as an international.
==Life==

He was born in Hanwood, Shropshire, the younger son of Charles Lloyd Jones (1828-1901), who was known as the squire of Hanwood, about three miles from Shrewsbury. Like his father, his name was not hyphenated on his birth certificate; while commonly named as Lloyd-Jones in newspaper reports, he was also at other times named as C.A.L. Jones,〔Example report as "C.A.L. Jones".〕 rarely Clopton Jones.〔Example of report as "Clopton Jones".〕
He studied at Trent College, where he was a boarder at the 1871 census, and was being reported as Lloyd-Jones by the time he left in 1875. He was one of two senior pupils who passed "Satisfied" at the Cambridge University Local Examinations of Christmas 1874 but he did not enter university.〔"Satisfied" was the lowest acceptable examination grade, the higher grades in ascending order being Class III, Class II and Class I.〕
Lloyd-Jones worked in London as an indigo broker (lodging in Hetherington Road, Clapham, in the 1881 census) but during 1884 returned to Shropshire and later moved into Shrewsbury where he set up as a commission agent, i.e. a bookmaker (1891, 1901 and 1911 census).
Lloyd-Jones married on 30 October 1894, at St Chad's Church, Shrewsbury, Sarah Emma Catherine (also known as Lily), daughter of Robert Everall, a Shrewsbury builder.〔Wedding report.〕〔Marriage notice.〕 The couple had four children who survived him.〔Obituary, which mentions his bowling and boat club activities but not his football and cricket.〕
Lloyd-Jones died on 7 March 1918, aged 59, at his last home, Montreux, Belle Vue Gardens in Shrewsbury, after what was described as 'a long and painful illness',〔 from cancer of the bladder.〔Death Certificate, Registration District of Atcham, Sub-District of St Mary, No 149 of 1918. Cause of death: "1.a. Tumour of bladder, malignant b. Exhaustion."〕 He was buried on 9 March in Shrewsbury’s General Cemetery〔Death notice.〕 in Longden Road where, more recently in 2002, the Football League's all-time leading goalscorer, Arthur Rowley, was also buried. His headstone, in section 147, bears the Italian motto ''Godi tu che vinci'' – a translation of this being "Enjoy, you who win".

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Clopton Lloyd-Jones」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.