Bill Hoskyns Athlete

Henry William Furse "Bill" Hoskyns (born 9 March 1931) was a British fencer who appeared at six Olympic Games, winning two silver medals in 1960 and 1964. No British fencer has won an Olympic medal since. He was born in London. He competed with all three weapons (doing so in the 1956 and 1964 Olympics) but he was especially effective at Épée, where he was 1958 World Champion. He is one of only five fencers to compete at at least six Olympic Games. He was eight times British champion, winning at least once at each weapon - a feat no one, including his great rival, Allan Jay, ever matched. During the time (1950 to 1970) that fencing was a sport at the Commonwealth Games, Hoskyns won nine gold (four individual) and one silver medal. Individually, he won gold in both épée and sabre in 1958, gold in épée and silver in foil 1966, gold in Épée in 1970. At the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, he was part of the British silver-medal winning épée team. At the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Hoskyns won silver in the épée, losing to Soviet fencer Grigory Kriss in the final. He undoubtedly may claim to be Britain's most successful fencer at all three weapons.

Personal facts

Alias (AKA)Hoskyns Henry William Furse
Birth dateMarch 19, 1931
Birth place
England , London
Nationality
United Kingdom
Date of deathAugust 04, 2013

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