John Tufton, 2nd Baron Hothfield


John Sackville Richard Tufton, 2nd Baron Hothfield, was a British Army officer, farmer and land owner who played first-class cricket for Kent County Cricket Club. He served during the Second Boer War and First World War and succeeded to his title as the 2nd Baron Hothfield in 1926.

Early life

Tufton was born in November 1873 at Hothfield Place near Ashford in Kent. He was the eldest son of Henry Tufton, 1st Baron Hothfield and his wife Alice and was educated at Eton College between 1887 and 1892. He did not play cricket in the school XI but was a keen sportsman and came from a family with a "strong cricketing tradition" stretching back 150 years, his father having been President of Kent County Cricket Club in 1877.

Army career

On leaving school in 1892, Tufton was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the 3rd Battalion of The Royal Sussex Regiment, a militia unit. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1893 before applying to join the regular army in 1894, reverting to the rank of second lieutenant in the 1st Life Guards. He resigned his commission in 1896.
Tufton rejoined the Royal Sussex Regiment in 1900 during the Second Boer War, the first in which militia regiments were allowed to fight overseas. He was promoted to captain and saw active service in South Africa in reserve positions in Orange Free State and Transvaal. He was awarded the Queen's South Africa Medal with five clasps for his war service. He moved with the battalion to Saint Helena to guard prisoners of war before returning to the Southampton on the SS Dominion in September 1902.
Following the war, the 3rd Royal Sussex became a reserve battalion in 1908 and Tufton was appointed Major, serving at the battalion's depot at Chichester. At the outbreak of the First World War he volunteered for active service, moving with the battalion to Dover initially and then to France in February 1915 where he was appointed Assistant Provost Marshal attached to 6th Division headquarters with the rank of major. He served throughout the war, the division seeing action on the Western Front from the Second Battle of Ypres in 1915 through to the Hundred Days Offensive and attacks on the Hindenburg Line in 1918. He was mentioned in dispatches and awarded the Distinguished Service Order in the 1916 New Year Honours and received the Ordre de Léopold in 1918.
The division saw service in the army of occupation following the Armistice with Germany and Tufton continued to serve as APM until April 1919 and was again mentioned in dispatches in July. He was awarded the Order of Agricultural Merit by the French government before reverting to the Reserve of Officers.
Tufton was called back into service briefly during the 1921 threat of a General Strike but the army was not required to take action and he again reverted to the reserve. He relinquished his commission in 1925 after reaching the maximum age for service in the reserve.

Cricket

Tufton played in 13 first-class cricket matches in the years after he first left the army between 1897 and 1899. He was on the General Committee at Kent County Cricket Club between 1897 and 1909 and then again in 1914 and played club cricket regularly. He made his first-class debut for MCC against Leicestershire at Lord's in May 1897 before playing in six first-class matches for Kent during the same season. Two matches for both MCC and Kent in 1898 were followed by another two for MCC in 1899, another appearance against Leicestershire marking the end of his first-class career.
He continued to play club cricket until the 1914 season for sides including Free Foresters, I Zingari and Band of Brothers, an amateur side closely associated with Kent. He resigned his position on the Kent Committee at the start of the First World War as he opposed Lord Harris' position on continuing to play top-class cricket during the war.

Family life

As well as playing cricket, Tufton was a keen lawn tennis player, considered one of the best in the House of Lords. He married Lady Ierne Hastings, the third daughter of the 13th Earl of Huntingdon, in 1896 and had two sons and two daughters. Following the death of his first wife in 1935 he married Sybil Augusta Sant.
He was appointed as Deputy Lieutenant of the County of Westmorland in 1894 and inherited his father's estates in Yorkshire and Westmorland in 1926. He served in the House of Lords, as a Justice of the Peace in both Kent and Westmorland and was twice Mayor of Appleby-in-Westmorland before the Second World War but had to sell most of land and property, mainly to his tenants, in 1947.
His second wife died in 1950, and Tufton died in December 1952 aged 79 at his Bayswater home. His eldest son Henry succeeded him as the 3rd Baron Hothfield.