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This film is part of Free

Olympic and British Fencer Bill Hoskyns

Fencer Bill Hoskyns defends medals after a break-in at home

Current affairs 1968 1 mins Silent

From the collection of:

Logo for South West Film and Television Archive

Overview

Olympic and British fencer Bill Hoskyns has his house checked for fingerprints after a break-in at his home in North Perrott in Somerset. He graduated from Oxford with a Fourth in Agriculture preferring instead to fence and mastered the Γ©pΓ©e, foil and sabre. Hoskyns missed the Helsinki Olympics in 1952 but helped Britain to a team bronze at the 1955 World Championships. After an invitation from Hungary he became the first private pilot to land a plane behind the Iron Curtain.

Hoskyns, a Major in the Army and a fruit farm manager, competed in six Olympic Games from Melbourne in 1956 to Montreal in 1976, winning the Γ©pΓ©e team silver at Rome in 1960 and an individual Γ©pΓ©e silver at Tokyo in 1964. No British fencer has since won an Olympic medal. He competed in a total of seven World Championships from 1955 to 1967 winning Γ©pΓ©e gold in Philadelphia in 1958 beating the then Olympic champion Eduardo Mangiarott. Hoskyns won nine gold medals in Γ©pΓ©e and sabre and a silver medal in foil at the Commonwealth Games. In the British Championships he took 21 medals. He won four Γ©pΓ©e titles, three foil titles and one sabre title and became only the second competitor to win all three championships at once.