Hamilton Jukes | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Born | (1895-05-28)28 May 1895 | ||||||||
| Died | 8 January 1951(1951-01-08) (aged 55) San Diego, California, USA | ||||||||
| Spouses | Dilys Gwendolyn Rees, Margaret Turnbull | ||||||||
| Children | 7 | ||||||||
Ice hockey player
| |||||||||
| Military career | |||||||||
| Allegiance | Canada/UK | ||||||||
| Rank | Lieutenant | ||||||||
| Unit | Canadian Expeditionary Force | ||||||||
| Conflicts | World War I | ||||||||
Hamilton Dawson Jukes (28 May 1895 – 8 January 1951) was a Canadian-bornice hockey player who competed in the1924 Winter Olympics with the British team.[1][2]
Born inWinnipeg,Manitoba, he was a member of the British ice hockey team, which won the bronze medal in 1924. After beinginvalidated out of the army in 1917, he settled inNewcastle-upon-Tyne before starting work as an engineer in theoil industry for British American Oil. He worked and lived inColombia andPeru for 25 years with his first wife, Dilys Gwendolyn (Rees), and their five children, Dilys Mary (Shan) - (born 1918), Margaret Cleaton - (born 1919), Yvonne Sarah (born 1920), Maureen Hamilton - (born 1921), and Arthur Hamilton (born 1922). He remarried and moved toEscondido, California in late 1948. Jukes and his second wife Margaret had two sons, Hamilton Dawson Jr. and John Frederick.[3] Jukes died by suicide inEscondido, California in 1951.[2][3][4]
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