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David MacMyn

David MacMyn
Full name David James MacMyn
Date of birth 18 February 1903
Place of birth Kirkcudbright
Date of death 16 March 1978
Place of death aged 75 years 26 days)
School Fettes College
University Pembroke College, Cambridge
Rugby union career
Position(s) Lock
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1925-1928
1927
 Scotland
Great Britain XV
11
0
(6)
(0)
Position(s) Lock
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1925-1928
1927
 Scotland
Great Britain XV
11
0
(6)
(0)

Dr David James MacMyn TD, BA, MB, BCHIR was a rugby union international who represented Scotland from 1925 to 1928 later becoming president of the Scottish Rugby Union. He also practiced as a surgeon.

David James MacMyn was born on 18 February 1903 at Kirkcudbright the son of a doctor. He was educated at Kirkcudbright Academy, then Fettes College from 1916 where he was assigned to Glencorse House. He then went up to Pembroke College, Cambridge where his rugby ability developed at Fettes won him his blue as a fresher at Cambridge. He took the BA with honours in 1924 before studying medicine at King's College Hospital, London.

MacMyn made his international debut on 24 January 1925 at Inverleith in the Scotland vs France match. Of the 11 matches he played for his national side he was on the winning side on 10 occasions. In 1927, he was chosen to captain the British Isles tour to Argentina which was won by four Tests to nil. He played his final match for Scotland on 2 January 1928 at Colombes in the France vs Scotland match. His club career had seen him play for London Scottish FC and King's College Hospital RFC.

After his playing career he remained involved in rugby and from 1958 to 1959 served as President of the Scottish Rugby Union. For many years he was also a Scottish selector.

In 1928 he graduated MB, BChir at King's College Hospital. In 1932 he obtained a Rockefeller Travelling Fellowship in surgery, and he studied neurosurgery at the Mayo Clinic. He returned to London eighteen months later and having had difficulty in qualifying for the FRCS, he accepted a partnership in a West End general practice abandoning a career in neurosurgery. After his military career during and just after the Second World War he joined his father in his long-established general practice at Kirkcudbright.


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