Robert Todd (rugby union)
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| Full name | Robert Todd | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Born | April 1847 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Died | 9 February 1927 (aged 79) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Robert Todd (April 1847 – 9 February 1927) was an English rugby union forward who played for the England in 1877. A prominent member of Manchester Football Club during the formative years of rugby in northern England, he also represented Lancashire and appeared in the leading North v South representative fixtures of the period.[1][2]
Todd was born in April 1847 at Holcombe Brook near Bury, Lancashire.[3] He was the eldest son of William Todd, a cotton spinner and industrialist, and Elizabeth Todd (née Meadowcroft).[4]
His father became a prominent figure in the Lancashire cotton industry, operating as a cotton spinner and manufacturer in the Heywood district and employing a substantial workforce. He later served as a magistrate and was widely known in commercial circles in northern England as a member of the Manchester Exchange.[5] The Todd family had been engaged in manufacturing for at least one earlier generation, as Robert's grandfather, also named Robert Todd, was also a manufacturer.[6]
Robert was the eldest of several children. His younger siblings included John, Margaret, Mary Ellen, Richard and William Henry.[7]
Raised in the industrial cotton district of north-east Lancashire, Todd entered the textile trade himself and worked as a cotton cloth agent, a commercial role connected with the marketing and sale of cotton goods produced by Lancashire mills.[8][9]
In 1883 he married Alice Wyles at St Andrew's Church, Allesley in Warwickshire. At the time he was living in Cheadle, Cheshire.[10]