Mike Marshall (rugby union) explained

Mike Marshall
Full Name:Robert Mackenzie Marshall
Birth Date:18 May 1917
Birth Place:Pontefract, Yorkshire, England
Death Place:at sea, Skagerrak
School:Giggleswick School
University:Oriel College, Oxford
Position:Forward
Repyears1:1938–39
Repcaps1:5
Reppoints1:3

Lieutenant commander Robert Mackenzie "Mike" Marshall (18 May 1917 – 12 May 1945) was a Royal Navy officer and England international rugby union player of the 1930s.

Born in Pontefract, Yorkshire, Marshall was educated at Giggleswick School, before moving with his family to Scarborough in his late teens. He attended Oriel College, Oxford, where he gained two blues, participating in the 1936 and 1937 Varsity Matches for Oxford University. A forward, Marshall also played for Harlequins and was capped five times for England, scoring a try on debut against Ireland at Lansdowne Road, outpacing the Irish fullback in a dash for the try-line.[1] [2]

Marshall served with the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve in World War II, undertaking numerous missions on a motor gunboat. He reached the rank of Lieutenant commander and in 1944 was awarded a Distinguished Service Cross for ramming and sinking an E-boat off East Anglia, with a bar added the following year. His death occurred four days after the Germans surrendered, while commanding a motor gunboat en route to Gothenburg, where the Merchant Navy Officers he was carrying were to negotiate the return of three British merchant vessels. The boat sunk when it struck a mine.[3] [4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Amazing Mike was a hero in real life . The Rugby Paper . 31 January 2021.
  2. News: England Supreme . . 13 February 1938.
  3. News: Lt. Com R. M. Marshall Presumed Killed . . 25 May 1945.
  4. Web site: HM MGB 2002 . Benjidog Historical Research Resources.