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Christopher Tanner

English rugby union player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christopher Tanner
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Christopher Champain Tanner, AM (24 June 1908[1] – 22 May 1941[2]) was a Gloucester,[3] Barbarians[4] and England Rugby Union international,[5] winning five caps between 1930 and 1932.[6] He was posthumously awarded the Albert Medal for the rescue of around 30 sailors[7] in the Second World War.[8]

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Tanner was educated at Cheltenham College[9] and Pembroke College, Cambridge.[10] He was ordained in 1935; served curacies in Farnham, Surrey and Gloucester; and was Priest in charge of St Christopher, Haslemere.[11] In 1937 he married Eleanor Rutherford:[12] they had one daughter born after his death in 1941.[13]

In June 1940 he became a Chaplain[14] with the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve;[15] and was awarded the Albert Medal for his work in attempting to save fellow shipmates[16] when HMS Fiji was sunk during the Battle of Crete in May 1941.[17] He succumbed to his exhaustion and died, aged 32, as soon as he was about to board HMS Kandahar.[8] He is commemorated on the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Plymouth Naval Memorial.[18] The rood cross at St Christopher, Haslemere is dedicated to his memory.[19]

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