Woof was born in Coalbrookdale, son of Edward Woof and his wife Sarah (née Rowsby).[3]
He studied violin with Hans Wessely at the Royal Academy of Music.[4]
Career
From information in prospectuses of the Royal Academy of Music.[5]
Violin sub-professor: 1904-1905
In 1904 Woof won the Messrs. Hill & Sons’ Prize, and the Charles Rube Prize for quartet playing with Ivy L. St. Aubyn Angove, James T. Lockyer, and B. Walton O'Donnell. Woof was a Wessely Exhibitioner at the RAM.[6]
Woof was also awarded the Royal Academy of Music's Bronze Medal for Violin in 1904,[7] the Silver Medal for Violin in 1905[8] as well as the Hannah Mayer Fitzroy Prize,[9] and the James Tubbs and Son’s Prize[10] and the Dove Prize in 1906.[11] In 1907, he made his debut at Bechstein Hall (now Wigmore Hall).[12]
Violin professor: 1909-1939
Viola professor: 1912-1939
Ensemble playing classes: 1914-1923
Personal life
In 1911, Woof married Victoria Mary Fox, a music teacher. They had no children.[13] He died 31 December 1943.[14]
Legacy
The Rowsby Woof Prize for Royal Academy of Music violin students, founded by his wife in 1944, was awarded annually in the years 1945 to 1963. The Prize Board listing the awardees was added to the RAM Museum's collection in 2011. Recipients include Colin Sauer (1945), Beryl Kimber (1949), Clarence Myerscough (1952), Brendan O' Reilly (1956) and John Georgiadis (1959) of the Gabrieli String Quartet, and Roy Malan (1963), founding concertmaster of the San Francisco Ballet Orchestra.[15]
^Information supplied thanks to the librarian at the London Royal Academy of Music. No prospectus available for 1940, and his name is not listed in the 1941 prospectus.