Patrick Cobbold
Patrick Mark Cobbold (20 June 1934 – 16 December 1994) was an English businessman and a grandson of Victor Cavendish, 9th Duke of Devonshire.
He was educated with his elder brother John at Wellesley House and Eton College. He was 10 when their father, Lieutenant Colonel Ivan Cobbold, was killed in the Guards Chapel, London, on 18 June 1944 when a flying bomb (V1) hit the Chapel during the Sunday morning service.[1]
He served as a director of the family brewery Tolly Cobbold and joined the board of Ipswich Town F.C. in 1964. He became the fifth member of his family to chair the club (1976–1991). During his chairmanship of the club, Ipswich won the FA Cup and the UEFA Cup, as well as finishing Football League First Division runners-up on two occasions and supplying the England national football team with a new manager in Bobby Robson in 1982.
He died in December 1994 at the age of 60, three years after retiring as chairman of Ipswich Town.
References
- ^ War Diaries of Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke
External links
- Pride of Anglia[permanent dead link]
- "Patrick Mark Cobbold" at The Peerage
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Thomas Cobbold brewer (1680–1752) | Mary Woodthorpe (died 1758) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thomas Cobbold (1708–1767) | Sarah Cobbold (1717–1777) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Isabella Garrett (died 1777) | William Cobbold (1747–1795) | Elizabeth Wilkinson (1753–1790) | John Cobbold (1746–1835) | Elizabeth Knipe novelist and poet (1765–1824) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mary Anne Trapnell (1781–1810) | Thomas Cobbold (1772–1835) | Harriet Temple Chevallier (1775–1851) | John Wilkinson Cobbold (1774–1860) | Richard Cobbold novelist and priest (1797–1877) | Mary Anne Waller (1801–1876) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mary Anne Cobbold (1806–1868) | Francis Cobbold priest (1803–1844) | John Chevallier Cobbold brewer, railway developer and politician (1797–1882) | Lucy Patteson (1800–1879) | Thomas Spencer Cobbold scientist (1828–1886) | Edward Augustus Cobbold priest (1825–1900) | Mathilda Caroline Smith (1826–1923) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Charles Chevallier priest and canon (1823–1885) | Isobella Frances Cobbold (1834–1917) | John Patteson Cobbold politician (1831–1875) | Adela Harriette Dupuis (1837–1917) | Nathanael Fromanteel Cobbold (1839–1886) | Caroline Ellen Boutell (1843–1882) | William Nevill "Nuts" Cobbold footballer (1863–1922) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Maj. Ernest St George Cobbold (1840–1895) | Helen Emma Cazenove (1842–1917) | Thomas Clement Cobbold diplomat (1833–1883) | Felix Thornley Cobbold barrister and politician (1841–1909) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
John Barrington Chevallier (1857–1940) | Isabel Amy Cobbold (1869–1931) | John Dupuis Cobbold (1861–1929) | Lady Evelyn Murray later Zainab Cobbold (1867–1963) | Ralph Patteson Cobbold British Army soldier and writer (1869–1965) | Clement John Cobbold (1882–1961) | Stella Willoughby Cameron (1882–1918) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lady Blanche Katharine Cavendish (1898–1987) | John Murray Cobbold (1897–1944) | Pamela Cobbold (1900–1932) | Charles Jocelyn Hambro merchant banker and intelligence officer (1897–1963) | Lady Margaret Hermione Lytton (1905–2004) | Cameron Fromanteel Cobbold, 1st Baron Cobbold (1904–1987) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
John Cavendish Cobbold businessman (1927–1983) | Patrick Mark Cobbold businessman (1934–1994) | Charles Eric "Charlie" Hambro, Baron Hambro (1930–2002) | David Antony Lytton Cobbold, 2nd Baron Cobbold (1937–2022) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Henry Fromanteel Lytton Cobbold, 3rd Baron Cobbold (born 1962) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
- Cobbold Family History Trust