Tony Bentley-Buckle

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexMale
Full nameAnthony William "Tony"•Bentley-Buckle
Used nameTony•Bentley-Buckle
Nick/petnamesBB
Born13 August 1921 in Knokke, West-Vlaanderen (BEL)
Died24 May 2010 in Brockenhurst, England (GBR)
Measurements174 cm / 74 kg
NOC Kenya

Biography

The son of a world-travelling tea-planter, Tony Bentley-Buckle was born in Belgium, grew up in Ceylon, and attended Ampleforth College in England before spending 10 years with the Royal Navy from 1938 through 1948. During this time he had a heroic tenure during World War II, including almost unreal escapades as he attempted to evade capture behind enemy lines and a difficult 18-month stint as a prisoner of war. He moved to Kenya after leaving the services and established a sizeable shipping business. He later sold this venture and went on to found an airline company that would eventually form a major part of Air Seychelles. During his time in Kenya he put his sailing skills to good use by representing the country at the 1960 Summer Olympics in the Flying Dutchman class, alongside Ronald Blaker. The duo never finished better than eighth in any race and were 20th overall. Bentley-Buckle’s autobiography, Through Albert’s Eyes, was published posthumously in 2013 and focuses primarily on his adventures during World War II.

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1960 Summer Olympics Sailing KEN Tony Bentley-Buckle
Two Person Heavyweight Dinghy, Open (Olympic) Ronald Blaker 20