Richard Boyle (rowing)
Richard Frederick Robert Pochin Boyle (11 October 1888 – 6 February 1953) was a British coxswain who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics.[1] Boyle was born at Ipsden, Oxfordshire, the son of Major Charles John Boyle and Lillian Kennedy Pochin.[2] Boyle was educated at Cambridge University and coxed the Cambridge boat in the Boat Race in 1907 and 1908. The Cambridge crew made up a boat in the eights which won the bronze medal rowing at the 1908 Summer Olympics.[3] In the First World War, Boyle was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry on 14 September 1914.[4] He was promoted to temporary lieutenant on 9 December 1914,[5] temporary captain on 23 July 1915,[6] substantive lieutenant on 14 July 1916[7] and substantive captain on 24 June 1917.[8] He was wounded and relinquished his commission on 8 May 1919 due to ill health.[9] Boyle married Marion Elisa Hill Wallace, daughter of Major-General Hill Wallace, on 12 February 1918. See alsoReferences
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