Background
Parr was born at Bickley, near Bromley, Kent, son of a British Army General, and educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford, graduating as Bachelor of Arts in 1883.
cricketer association football player
Parr was born at Bickley, near Bromley, Kent, son of a British Army General, and educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford, graduating as Bachelor of Arts in 1883.
Winchester College.
Parr had played in the Winchester football XI in 1877, and was an Oxford football Blue in each year of 1880 to 1882, captaining his team in the latter year. C.W. Alcock described him as "a splendid goalkeeper, very cool and full of pluck" though he also appeared for England as centre-forward in his one international game, against Wales at Wrexham in 1882, scoring a goal. He kept goal in his first two Varsity matches, but captained his team as centre in the third.
At the Final for Oxford against Clapham Rovers on 10 April 1880 at Kennington Oval, he kept goal successfully until, just six minutes before call of time, Clopton Lloyd-Jones scored the match"s only goal, let in through a weak mis-kick from Oxford team-mate Charles King, for Rovers.
Parr also played for Swifts F.C., where as centre he scored the hat-trick of goals against Upton Park in a second round Cup tie replay in 1882, as well as old boy club Old Wykehamists. He also played in representative matches for West Kent and Kent county.
Parr was also a cricketer, playing in the Winchester College XI in 1877-1878 and made one first-class cricket appearance for the Gentlemen of Kent in 1880. Parr was a barrister, called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1885, who later branched out into publishing.
He died at his last home, Molescroft, at Widmore, Bromley, in 1912 aged fifty-two.
Oxford University A.F.C.
He was a member of the Football Association committee in 1881.