Captain Charles Thomas Irvine "Pat" Roark (1895–1939) was an English polo player. He held a ten goal handicap at the peak of his career.[1]

Biography

Early life

He was born in Ireland on 2 May 1895.[2] His father was Thomas Irvine Roark of Wexford.

He was commissioned into the Royal Irish Rifles in October 1914, transferred to the Household Cavalry in June 1917 and served in France in 1917 with the Life Guards, after which he transferred to the Indian Army and the 34th P.A.V.O. Poona Horse (later 17th Q.V.O. Cavalry) in May 1918.[3] He retired a Captain in July 1922.[4]

Career

He played for England in the International Polo Cup in 1927[5] and 1930. He won the US Open Polo Championship with his team, the Hurricanes.[6] in 1926, 1929 and 1930.[7] He also captained the victorious Hurricanes (polo) team in the Roehampton Cup in 1928 and 1931.

Personal life

He first married Grace Muriel Campbell (the sister of a brother officer in the Poona Horse, Captain Wentworth Edward Dallas Campbell). They were married in St Paul's Church, Umballa, Punjab, India in 1919 and they had a son (b. 1920). She divorced him in 1929 on the grounds of his adultery.

He married again in 1930.

Lastly in 1938 he married Patsy Hostetter Smith in California and they had one son. She remarried in 1942 to Walter D. K. Gibson, Jr.

He died on 18 February 1939 from injuries incurred in a fall during a practice match at Pasadena, California. He had been due to play a third International Polo Cup for England that year.

References

  1. Kelley, Robert F. (15 August 1931). "Lacey's Polo Team Here For U.S. Open". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 March 2015. With the arrival yesterday of Hurlingham, the second of the Argentine polo teams entered in our open championship at the Meadow Brook Club at Westbury next month, and of Captain C.T.I. Roark, Great Britain's only ten-goal player, who is to play with the Hurricanes ...
  2. Quarterly Army List March 1922
  3. The Poona Horse, Volume 2, p 222
  4. London Gazette 22 July 1922
  5. "Sport: From Hurlingham". Time. 25 July 1927. Archived from the original on 25 November 2010.
  6. "Sport: Open Polo". Time. 16 September 1929. Archived from the original on 27 October 2010.
  7. "US Open Champions". Archived from the original on 18 February 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2010.
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