Roger Cuthbert WakefieldCMGOBEFRICS (27 June 1906 – 1 July 1986) was a rugby player for Cambridge University, Harlequins and British Lions and a surveyor, former Director of the British Sudan Survey Department.
Early life
Wakefield was born at Cark in 1906, the youngest son of Roger William Wakefield, a medical doctor, and Ethel Mary (née Knott). He was the brother of Sir Edward Wakefield, 1st Baronet, a Conservative politician and Wavell Wakefield who played in three England rugby union grand slam winning teams captaining two of them, and later a politician and eventually 1st Baron Wakefield of Kendal.
At Cambridge he was an occasional player due to the strength of competition but did gain his Blue. He was selected for the 1927 British Lions tour, playing in four games but none of the four internationals. Despite being selected for tour he never went on to play for England.[2] Wakefield also played a number of games for Harlequins in 1928. On 19 April 1928 he and his brother both played in the same team at Barnstable.
Surveying career
Wakefield played a significant part in the history of British survey. In 1929 he was appointed a Senior Inspector of the Survey Department in Khartoum, Sudan. In 1946 he was appointed the Director of the Department, holding the position until his retirement in 1955.[3]
He married Elizabeth Rhoda Davie, born in 1936.[4] They lived at Glendrynoch Lodge, Carbost, Isle of Skye, Scotland, having a daughter Deirdre Eva Preston Wakefield, born on 9 November 1943. She married Commander William Lawrence Tosco Peppé, son of Lt.-Col. William Tosco H. Peppé, on 29 October 1966. Wakefield died on 1 July 1986, aged 80.[3]
12Great Britain. Directorate of Overseas Surveys, Survey review, Volume 28, Issues 218-222, OBITUARY RC WAKEFIELD, p419, Published 1986
↑Norman, Macdonald (2014). The great book of Skye: from the island to the world: people and place on a Scottish island. Maclean, Cailean. Portree. ISBN978-0952868798. OCLC897503159.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)