Tom White (rugby union)
Thomas Brown White (1 March 1866 – 5 July 1939) was a Scotland international rugby union player and physician.[1] Rugby Union careerAmateur careerHe was schooled at Edinburgh Academy.[2] He played for Edinburgh Academicals.[3] Provincial careerHe played for Edinburgh District against Glasgow District in the inter-city match of 1887.[3] He played for East of Scotland District in their match against West of Scotland District in February 1888.[4] International careerHe was capped three times for Scotland, in the period 1888 to 1889.[5] Business careerHe worked on the P & O Shipping Line.[2] Military careerIn the First World War he served with the Royal Navy.[2] Medical careerWhite went to Edinburgh University to study medicine. He graduated with a M. B. and C. M. in 1888. White became a surgeon, first at the County Hospital in Ayr, then started his own practice in Moffat as a G.P. in 1894. With the exception of the war years, the last 45 years of his life were spent in Moffat.[2][6] Other interestsWhite was a noted Freemason. He also like golf and curling.[2] FamilyHis father was Andrew White (1828–1879) and his mother was Janet Young (1831–1869). Andrew White was a solicitor and bank clerk in Cumnock. Tom was one of their seven children. He married Isabelle Constance Megret (1869–1942) in Edinburgh in February 1901. They had one daughter, Anita Louise White, a figure skater who represented France at the 1928 Winter Olympics.[2] DeathWhite, who had otherwise been in good health, suddenly fell ill and died on 5 July 1939, aged 73.[7] References
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