Arthur Thomas Myers
Country (sports) | United Kingdom |
---|---|
Born | Keswick, Cumberland | 16 April 1851
Died | 10 January 1894 Marylebone, London | (aged 42)
Singles | |
Grand Slam singles results | |
Wimbledon | QF (1878) |
Dr Arthur Thomas Myers (16 April 1851 – 10 January 1894) was a British physician and sportsman. As a tennis player he participated in two Wimbledon Championships and also played first-class cricket.
While studying at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1870, Myers played a first-class cricket match for Cambridge University against the Marylebone Cricket Club. He batted in the middle order and scored seven in the first innings, then six in the second.[1] He was a Cambridge Apostle.
In 1878 he competed in his first Wimbledon and made it into the quarter-finals, before being defeated in straight sets by eventual champion Frank Hadow. The following year he won his first two matches and was eliminated in the third round, by Irishman C. D. Barry.[2]
Myers suffered from epilepsy and is believed to have taken his own life in 1894.[3] John Hughlings Jackson published a study of his case.[4]
He was the brother of scholar Frederic William Henry Myers and poet Ernest Myers.
Notes
- ^ "Cambridge University v Marylebone Cricket Club". CricketArchive.
- ^ "Arthur Thomas Myers". Tennis Archives.
- ^ Arthur Thomas Myers, M.A., M.D. Cantab., F.R.C.P. British Medical Journal. 27 January 1894.
- ^ Taylor, David C.; March, Susan M. (1980). "Hughlings Jackson's Dr Z: the paradigm of temporal lobe epilepsy revealed". Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry. 43: 758–767. doi:10.1136/jnnp.43.9.758. PMC 490665. PMID 6999129.
References
- "Myers, Arthur Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/40751. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- 1851 births
- 1894 deaths
- Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
- 19th-century English medical doctors
- English male tennis players
- British male tennis players
- English cricketers
- Cambridge University cricketers
- Cricketers who committed suicide
- 19th-century male tennis players
- Male suicides
- English tennis biography stubs