Cecil Alloo


Howard Cecil Alloo was a New Zealand soldier, cricketer and lawyer.
Alloo played first-class cricket for Otago in New Zealand between 1919 and 1929. His highest score was 62 against Wellington in 1922–23.
His brothers Arthur and Albert also played for Otago. The brothers were the grandsons of John Alloo, a Chinese-born businessman on the Ballarat goldfields, and his wife, née Margaret Peacock, who had come out from Scotland. John and Margaret moved to the Otago [gold rush|Otago goldfields] in 1868, where he was employed by the Otago Police Force as a constable-interpreter.
In World War I, Cecil Alloo served overseas in the Otago Infantry Battalion. Initially a sergeant, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in mid-1918 and posted to C Company of the New Zealand [Rifle Brigade (Earl of Liverpool's Own)|New Zealand Rifle Brigade]. He was wounded in the Second [Battle of Bapaume] in August and invalided to England.
He joined his brother Albert's law firm after the war, and later practised in Owaka and then in Timaru. He also served in the army during World War II, this time in New Zealand.