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Samuel Hill Wood

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Education
  
Eton College

Role
  
Businessman


Name
  
Samuel Hill-Wood

1894–1902
  
Derbyshire

Party
  
Conservative Party


Full name
  
Sir Samuel Hill-Wood, 1st Baronet

Born
  
21 March 1872 (
1872-03-21
)
Glossop, Derbyshire, England

First-class debut
  
30 July 1894 Derbyshire v Yorkshire

Last First-class
  
21 August 1902 Derbyshire v Essex

Died
  
January 4, 1949, Westminster, United Kingdom

Relations
  
Basil Hill-Wood, Wilfred Hill-Wood, Denis Hill-Wood, Charles Hill-Wood

Batting style
  
Right-handed batsman

Sir Samuel Hill Hill-Wood, 1st Baronet (21 March 1872 – 4 January 1949), born Samuel Hill Wood, was a British businessman, Conservative politician, cricketer and football club chairman.

Contents

Early life

Wood was born in Glossop, Derbyshire the son of Samuel Wood, a cotton manufacturer and his wife Annie. His father made his fortune in the cotton industry in Derbyshire during the late 19th century. Samuel Hill Wood was educated at Eton College and was a keen sportsman. He continued to run the cotton business.

Cricket career

Wood made his cricket debut for Derbyshire in the 1894 season, and became their captain in the 1899 season for three seasons. Wood was the only batsman to score 10 runs off one ball in a first-class game. In May 1900, when playing for Derbyshire against MCC, he struck a ball from Cuthbert Burnup and as a result of the netting and an overthrow clocked up ten – a feat which was originally included in the Guinness Book of Records. Wood was a right hand batsman and played 54 innings in 24 first-class matches, with an average of 17.62 and a top score of 81 not out. He took no wickets in the 93 balls he bowled. Under his captaincy Derbyshire were fifteenth in the County Championship in 1899, thirteenth in 1900 and back to fifteenth in 1901.

Football at Glossop

Wood was chairman and owner of Glossop North End funding it up until World War I. His expenditure was estimated to be more than £30,000 at that time. His efforts and enthusiasm led to the club being included in the enlarged Football League Second Division in 1898. He scoured the country for professional footballers and after only one season Glossop qualified as Second Division runners up and were promoted to the First Division. They were relegated after a season and by 1914 Hill Wood severed his connection and Glossop later resigned from the Football League.

Political career

In 1910, Hill Wood was elected MP for High Peak, holding the seat until 1929. He changed his name to Hill-Wood by royal licence in 1912.

In the First World War, he served in the Cheshire Regiment reaching the rank of Major.

He was created a baronet in the 1921 New Year Honours.

Arsenal chairmanship

In 1929, after leaving parliament, he succeeded the disgraced Henry Norris as chairman of Arsenal, and presided over the club during its first period of success in the 1930s. He stepped down in 1936 but returned to the role after the Second World War, holding the post until his death in Westminster in 1949. In another field of sport, he owned two greyhounds who won the Waterloo Cup.

Family

Hill Wood married the Hon Rachel Bateman-Hanbury youngest daughter of Lord Bateman-Hanbury in 1899 and had four sons Basil, Wilfred, Denis and Charles. His son Denis and grandson Peter Hill-Wood have also served as chairmen of Arsenal, while his sons, Basil, Denis, Wilfred and Charles and brother-in-law David Brand, have all played county cricket for Derbyshire at various points in their history.

References

Samuel Hill-Wood Wikipedia