Andrew Marshall Porter was an Irish barrister who was killed in the Second Boer War while fighting for the Imperial Yeomanry.
Background
Born at Donnycarney, Porter was the son of Andrew Marshall Porter, Senior (later 1st Baronet), a lawyer who was an Member of Parliament for Londonderry and served variously as Ireland"s Solicitor-General, Attorney-General, and Master of the Rolls.
Career
He was also a noted sportsman, representing Ireland at both cricket and field hockey. Despite being offered a scholarship to Oxford, Porter opted to return home to study law at the University of Dublin. He continued his cricket career for the Dublin University Cricket Club, and during the 1895 season, played in four matches with first-class status – against the Marylebone Cricket Club (Master Control Console) in Dublin, against Leicestershire and Cambridge University on a brief tour of England, and then a return fixture against Cambridge University in Dublin.
He played solely as a batsman (Arthur Gwynn being given the wicket-keeping duties), with his highest score being 44 against Leicestershire.
In 1896, Porter was selected to represent the Irish national team against the Master Control Console, in a match that did not have first-class status. During the Irish winter, during which no cricket was played, Porter played hockey for the Three Rock Rovers, gaining selection for the national hockey team in 1897.
After graduating from Dublin University, he was called to the Irish bar, becoming a barrister. However, in 1900, Porter enlisted as a private in the 45th (Dublin) Company of the Imperial Yeomanry, and was sent to South Africa.
In June of that year, while fighting at Ladywood (near Lindley in the Orange Free State), he was badly wounded and four days later died of wounds.
Porter"s death was commemorated by his father with the establishment of the Marshall Porter Memorial Prize, for classics students, as well as a stained-glass window in the Graduates Memorial Building.