Tom Voyce
King of Gloucester
By Malc King
Regarded as one of the games greatest back row specialists, he began his playing career at the local Gordon League club. The flank forward made 218 appearances for Gloucester in which time he scored 54 tries.
Tom appeared in every match of England's Grand Slam winning teams of 1921, 1923 and 1924, and also represented the Army and the Barbarians. Tom was captain of Gloucester from 1924-1927 and was a member of the British touring side to South Africa in 1924.
His career was an amazing achievement because of the serious eye defect he sustained whilst serving for the Gloucestershire Regiment in World War I, and during World War II Tom served as a major in the Royal Army Signal Corp. Away from the game he was Chairman of the Gloucestershire Playing Fields Association and President of the St John Ambulance Brigade in the County. Tom became President of the Rugby Football Union in 1960 and was awarded the Order of the British Empire two years later. Later he became President of Gloucester, 1970-1978.
On the 1924 tour of South Africa he displayed his remarkable versatility and team qualities as the utility player of the side, playing out of position at full back, centre and wing threequarter as well as his specialist position of wing forward. He scored eight tries in thirteen games and kicked several goals. P.K.Albertijn, the South African captain, described him as " the second best wing threequarter in the British team."
"Since the War no man has fired the admiration of the crowd more than Tom Voyce, and in my experience I have never seen his equal. No man ever followed the ball throughout the two hard 'forties' so closely as he did, no man ever backed up his centre so closely, or attended his wing so assiduously as the 'King of Gloucester'. I shall always remember his wonderful attempt at a dropped goal, which would have saved the Twickenham record when Scotland beat England in 1926. He received a pass short of the half-way line, and ran a few yards forward as if he intended to open up a movement, but he suddenly paused, steadied himself, and took the most terrific hoof at the ball that I have ever seen, and only by inches did it fall short of the cross-bar." ( The Theory of Modern Rugby Football", published in 1930, and written by I.M.B. Stewart, Irish international forward and assistant master at Harrow School )
'The name of Tom Voyce is synonymous with that of Gloucester. Think of one and the other springs to mind. For he was a great player from a great club - a wonderful inspiration to any side. Tom had that personality and mental, competitive outlook that makes up a great player; and he was a shining example to others in that he was determined to put something back into the game for all the pleasure he had out of it', (Wavell Wakefield, England Captain 1924 - One Hundred Cherry & White Years, pg 91)